The Rosenbach's 1860s townhouse and garden provide an intimate setting
for the brothers' collections of rare books, manuscripts, furniture,
silver, paintings, prints, drawings, and sculpture. The house is located
in the heart of the Rittenhouse-Fitler historic district in Center City
Philadelphia.
Museum visitors enjoy regular exhibitions drawn from the Rosenbach's
impressive holdings. Selections from some of the best-known collections
are always on view, including James Joyce's manuscript for Ulysses,
original drawings by children's book author/illustrator Maurice
Sendak, and the papers of Modernist poet Marianne
Moore. In the years since its founding, the Rosenbach collections
have continued to grow.
The decorative and fine arts collections are rich and varied, ranging
from Egyptian sculpture, and English furniture, to American portraiture.
Highlights of these collections include a fine mid-18th century
Philadelphia tall chest, and a portrait by painter Thomas Sully of 19th
century civic leader Rebecca Gratz.
The Rosenbach preserves a nearly unparalleled rare book and manuscript
collection, with particular strength in American and British literature
and history. Exhibitions, programs, and research with this collection
have focused on Colonial American history, African American history,
children's literature, book arts and technology, gay and lesbian literature,
early Modernism, and much more.
Authors and artists represented at the Rosenbach include (but are
not limited to):
- Maurice Sendak: some 10,000 works, including original drawings,
preliminary sketches, manuscript materials, and rare editions;
- Cervantes: the finest known copy of the first edition of
Don Quixote;
- Phillis Wheatley: first editions of the first book published
by an African American;
- Thomas Jefferson: a draft of the Declaration of Independence;
an inventory of his slaves;
- George Washington: more than one hundred personal letters;
- Fragonard: original drawings for Orlando Furioso;
- William Blake: original drawings and books;
- Lewis Carroll: more than 600 letters, his rarest photographs,
books, and more;
- Charles Dickens: the largest surviving portions of the manuscripts
for Pickwick Papers and Nicholas Nickleby;
- Bram Stoker: notes and outlines for Dracula;
- Joseph Conrad: manuscripts for two-thirds of his literary
works, including Lord Jim, Nostromo, and
The Secret Agent;
- Mercedes de Acosta: letters, photographs, and ephemera relating
to cinema and lesbian history;
- Dylan Thomas: the manuscript and typescript for Under
Milk Wood.
Additionally, the Rosenbach has a long and important relationship
with the modernist poet Marianne
Moore (1887-1972). In the late 1960s, the museum
purchased from Moore virtually all of her manuscripts and correspondence.
When she bequeathed her personal belongings to the Rosenbach, the living
room of her Greenwich Village apartment was recreated in the museum
as a permanent installation. The Marianne Moore papers and living room
have earned the Rosenbach designation as a National Literary Landmark
by Friends of Libraries, USA.
The Rosenbach is an internationally known destination for lovers of
literature, art, and history. Permanent installations, special exhibitions,
outreach programs, and individualized research appointments work to
bring the Rosenbach brothers' vision to new and broader audiences every
day.
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Fine and Decorative Arts
Fine Arts
Metal, Ceramics, and Glass
Portrait Miniatures
Furniture, Clocks,
Looking
Glasses, Lighting, and Textiles
Vertu and Jewelry
Rare Books, Manuscripts,
Maps, and Broadsides
Americana
English, American,
and
Continental Literature
Book Arts, Incunabula,
Maps and Broadsides
Judaica, Children’s
Literature,
and Rosenbachiana
Collections Highlights
James Joyce's Ulysses
Marianne Moore Archive
Maurice Sendak Collection
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