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Amos B. Eaton diary

  • ASM0239
  • Collection
  • 1837-1838

The diary of Amos Beebe Eaton begins on July 31, 1837 and concludes on August 24, 1838. This handwritten journal chronicles an extraordinary year in the life of a young lieutenant who served in the Second Seminole War. The diary contains personal observations, detailed reports on military activities, occasional sketches and drawings, and extensive  commentary on the Seminole Indians and life in Florida. All notations are in Eaton's hand, including the transcription of letters and military documents.

Eaton, Amos Beebe, 1806-1877

Andre Rodgers papers

  • ASM0370
  • Collection
  • 1918-1941

A typescript by Rudi Franke in which he narrates the journey to France of a German infantry during World War II. The document also includes photographs, maps and hand drawn sketches.

Rodgers, Andre

Andrew Giel scrapbook and photo collection

  • ASM0269
  • Collection
  • 1956 - 2006

This collection contains scrapbooks, loose prints, and photo albums of Canada, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Miami, Miami Beach, and other countries in South America and the Caribbean.

Giel, Andrew

Andrew Kaufman Photography collection

  • ASM0306
  • Collection
  • 2012

The Andrew Kaufman Photography collection includes a box set of two hand made books created by the photographer that document the graffiti and street art in the Wynwood neighborhood of Miami. Also included in the collection is a folder of ephemera advertising Kaufman's photography business.

Andrew Kaufman

Andreyaa Hora artist sketchbooks collection

  • ASM0716
  • Collection
  • 2008-2019

The Andreyaa Hora artist sketchbooks collection consists of Hora's complete works in sketchbooks from the period 2008 to 2019.

Collection description, provided by Martin Tsang, Curator of Latin American Collections:

The fifteen sketchbooks that represent a significant portion of the artist’s work, to date, include an incredible variety of media - drawings, prints, quotes, gathered materials such as clippings and test pieces. The themes present in the pages of the books refer to and draw upon numerous Afro-Atlantic traditions, including Haitian Vodou, Brazilian Candomblé, Cuban Lucumí, as well as Yoruba, Fon, and Kongo ethnic and spiritual African sources. There is inspiration, for example, from specific orishas such as Oyá, the transformative goddess of the Harmattan winds, the marketplace, and owner of the cemetery gates, as well as more elusive traditions including Santa Muerte. In Andreyaa Hora's sketchbooks, Caribbean and Latinx artists are present and referenced as wellsprings of inspiration, as are European, Asian, and Indigenous connections. The sheer variety of media shows how the artist works out her ideas on paper and devises approaches to best convey matters of the spirit, the mind, and the body. The sketchbooks offer a tantalizing and inspirational glimpse into the creative processes of making the abstract concrete and beautifully demonstrate and bring to life the many deities who travel between and beyond Africa, the Americas, and the entire world. The books reflect a deep spiritual connection to the divine as captured by the hand and heart of someone who is careful and concerned with safeguarding ritual knowledge while utilizing a wealth of techniques that help bring art to life.

Artist's statement:

"My interest in art began early for me. From the age of eleven, I began taking art lessons in school in my hometown of Ilheus, in the state of Bahia, Brazil. My father, an architect, was a tremendous influence on my style and his work blueprints helped me understand and define spaces through lines, shapes, and forms. Through watching my father work and under his tutelage, I gained an appreciation of geometry and scale and working on paper to create pieces that could be developed into larger pieces, and also the importance of playing with materials and experimenting with forms. This early start in and out of school led me to further my abilities by taking private lessons with local artists that helped challenge my abilities and ways of seeing. Ultimately, these artists fostered inside me an abiding fascination with art that continues to this day.

I continued my studies at the University of La Rochelle, France and continued my practice under the guidance of local artists engaging with painters across the Niort region. In 2008 I became deeply interested in printmaking, inspired by the work of David Jones and Eric Gil whose work I saw in Wales in the UK. This period was a pivotal moment for me as this medium became my anchor in my mode of artistic expression. From this time, I also explored and embraced digital media and developing artistic technologies to further my methods. Viewing the work of James Jean was my inspiration to venture and experiment in new realms.

It was while studying and working on art in Europe that I began to appreciate the history and migrations that created the Lusophone Atlantic movements over the centuries. Through my art I started to explore and express facets of my Brazilian culture and my work is heavily inspired by deities of the African descent actively worshiped in Brazil and many countries of the Americas through the project of Trans-Atlantic slavery. The orishas - the pantheon of gods and goddesses are greatly present in my art and I explore ideas of contact and strategy of religious expression with references to deities in other African derived religions, indigenous beliefs, and the inclusion or transformation of European deities and philosophies by practitioners. I am particularly interested in exploring ideas, effects, and the presence of LGBTQ practitioners and how these are reflected in images of the divine in these Afro-Atlantic religions. I became fascinated by cordel - woodcut printed literature production of artists who I worked with in northeast Brazil. As an orisha priest and practitioner, I have devoted a considerable amount of my artistic output to creating works that reflect these deities in different methods drawn from these methodologies and my work is often commissioned by practitioners and my art now represents a movement of signifying worship in private and public ways.

I use a variety of printmaking techniques. I use manual techniques such as woodcut and linoleum which give my art a homely, rustic feel reminiscent of the art of Northeast Brazil which is close to my roots. I also use digital painting techniques that are rich in texture and colours. Whichever method I use, I start by sketching out my ideas in my notebooks which record my thought processes and studies much in the same way as a filmmaker would create a storyboard. From the outset, sketchbooks are key to my art process as they are a place to gather information: quotes, photos taken from a variety of places, works from the myriad of artists who inspire me, old and new. My sketchbooks have been shared with very few people as I am a perfectionist I would rather show a finished piece. My books represent the unfinished and undone, even messy work that includes my sketches and some are uncomfortable or dark visual thoughts, things that I feel I need to have an outlet for however I know will probably not make it into my exhibited works.

I create art because it is an intrinsic part of who I am and what I do. I couldn’t put into words what compels me to do it – I cannot imagine doing anything else. I take inspiration from folklore, music and the world around me and the world inside of me with all its contradictions, queerness, and search for the divine."

Hora, Andreyaa

Archives and History of the Coconut Grove Arts Festival

  • ASM0453
  • Collection
  • 1963-2012

In October, 1963, Charles Cinnamon, public relations director of the Coconut Grove Playhouse, organized a “Left Bank” art show to publicize the opening of Irma La Douce at the Playhouse. The art show was a success and shortly thereafter the Coconut Grove Association was formed to put on an annual art festival.

In the early days, the whole community got involved, and Festival activities included an antique car parade, coconut smashing contest, concerts, and a children’s art exhibit. The Chamber of Commerce and Grove House artists helped in putting on the festival.

This juried arts festival has repeatedly been selected as the top outdoor fine arts festival in the United States, displaying the work of artists from around the world and attracting families and connoisseurs alike.

The collection contains a variety of material including correspondence, newspaper clippings, publications, press releases, administrative files, photographs, ephemera and posters from the Coconut Grove Art Festival 1963 to 2012.

Arnaldo J. Lopez collection

  • ASM0712
  • Collection
  • 1982-1999

Born in Puerto Rico, Arnaldo J. López serves as the Development Officer at Pregones/Puerto Rican Traveling Theater (PRTT). He holds a Ph.D. in Latin American Literatures and Cultures from New York University and is an avid advocate of the arts. This collection features an array of zines, ephemera, comic books, and other archival material he collected in his lifetime.

Lopez, Arnaldo J.

Arnold Reiner collection

  • ASM0226
  • Collection
  • 1974-1991

The Arnold Reiner collection contains materials related to flight safety operations for Pan American World Airways. The collection includes issues of Flight Ops, a publication of Pan Am's Flight Safety Department; a copy of Pan Am's accident summary from 1959-1991; a 1974 report relating to Pan Am safety and operational concerns.

Reiner, Arnold

Arnold Volpe papers

  • ASM0257
  • Collection
  • 1967

The Arnold Volpe papers contains sheet music and scores composed by University of Miami professor Arnold Volpe.

Volpe, Arnold, 1869-1940

Art in Action Oral Histories Project

  • ASM0664
  • Collection
  • 2009-2010

enFAMILIA, Inc., the organization behind Art in Action, was created to provide Art education and Educational programs to help improve and preserve family life. Since its incorporation in 2000, enFAMILIA has worked in collaboration with forty-two (42) groups that include faith-based organizations, social service agencies, academic and art institutions. These partnerships have allowed enFAMILIA to provide over 240 school children with art education annually, as well as 1,500 adults with marriage and family education training.

Professional artists who have graduated or are attending universities throughout the United States such as, Juilliard, University of Miami, and New York University, among others, come to Homestead for two months in the summer and volunteer as teachers for the Art in Action summer camp. The camp is intended to recognize and foster local young talented children by opening up opportunities for their future, providing avenues of self-expression, and stimulating thoughts about issues of social impact. The Camp encompasses a diverse and intense curriculum of Music, Dance, Poetry, Visual Arts, Drama, Film and Photography.

The collection includes oral histories from Directors and Founders of local community organizations, students in the Arts in Action program, as well as immigrants to South Florida.

enFAMILIA, Inc.

Art in Miami collection

  • ASM0535
  • Collection
  • 1996-2019

The Art in Miami collection contains brochures, flyers, exhibit catalogs, pamphlets, handouts, and other ephemera documenting art and art-related activities in Miami, with material going as far back as 1996. Included are items from galleries, such as the Alejandra von Hartz Gallery, the Miami International Airport Gallery, and Lowe Art Museum Gallery, as well as various other local museums, art fairs, shows, and the Wynwood Arts District. The collection also includes brochures, programs, maps, handouts, and ephemera from the Art Basel show in Miami Beach, beginning with Art Basel 2009.

Arthur F. Cervenka papers

  • ASM0401
  • Collection
  • 1936

Contains Arthur Cervenka's acceptance letter to the University of Miami, an event invitation, a small UM flag, a UM campus information booklet from 1936, Cervenka's Fall 1936-1937 schedule, and one check for Fall tuition.

Cervenka, Arthur F.

Arthur Freed screenplay collection

  • ASM0437
  • Collection
  • 1921-1949

The Arthur Freed screenplay collection consists of 37 screenplays of both unfinished and completed film productions set to be produced by Arthur Freed during his tenure at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) Studios. Among others are included screenplays for Girl Crazy and Paris to New York.

Also included are several interoffice MGM notes and letters.

Freed, Arthur, 1894-1973

ArtSpace Virginia Miller Gallery collection

  • ASM0454
  • Collection
  • 1991-2016

Located in the heart of Coral Gables, ArtSpace Virginia Miller Galleries have served as a launching pad for budding young artists in South Florida and Latin America for over 44 years. This collection contains several publications and gallery catalogs that discuss many of the exhibits Virginia Miller and her colleagues have helped pioneer.

Arva Moore Parks collection

  • ASM0464
  • Collection
  • 1880s-2016

Research material from noted author and historian, Arva Moore Parks McCabe (1939-2020). Born in Miami, Florida, Arva had written countless books on Florida's eclectic history, including The Forgotten Frontier: Florida through the Lens of Ralph Middleton Munroe, Miami, the Magic City, and George Merrick, Son of the South Wind: Visionary Creator of Coral Gables. She also served as chief curator, interim director, and chair of the Coral Gables Museum.

This collection focuses heavily on George E. Merrick, Coral Gables, and other research topics used in her writings. It also features a large assortment of archival material: booklets, books, magazines, posters, photographs, negatives, pamphlets, postcards, maps, ephemera, newspapers, and guides about Miami and other notable cities and famous people related to South Florida.

Parks, Arva Moore

Augustus Seymour Houghton collection

  • ASM0098
  • Collection
  • 1905-1948

The papers of A.S. Houghton (1866-1948) numbering approximately 4500 items consist of articles, printed matter, newspaper clippings, by-laws, legislative matter, and pamphlets. The material extends from 1905 to 1948 with the bulk of the papers falling within the period of 1929 to 1948.

The papers deal primarily with Augustus Houghton's work as a conservationist.  The material is broken down into the different organizations with which he was involved.  There is a large section of material dealing with the American Game Association, the Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks, and the

Camp Fire Club of America but they are not a major part of the collection because Houghton corresponded and kept files on a diverse number of conservation and wildlife organizations.

The correspondence to and from August S. Houghton is varied and he had several principal correspondents, all of whom shared with him their interest in conservation.  His principal correspondents were: John B. Burnham, President of the American Game Protective Association, which later became the American Game Association; Carlos Avery, President of the American Game Association; Seth Gordon, President of the American Game Association; William Greely, leading member of the American Game Association; Erl Roman, Fishing Editor of the Miami Herald; Merlin Mitchell, Executive Secretary, Florida State Fish and Game Association and later secretary of the Florida Wildlife Federation; Jay N. (Ding) Darling, famous cartoonist and leading Florida conservationist; Dr. W.T. Hornaday, Zoological Gardens, N.Y.; Lithgow Osborne, Conservation Commissioner, State of New York; Raymond Torrey, Camp Fire Club of America; and Karl Frederick, President of the New York State Conservation Council.  Houghton also corresponded with F.G. Walton Smith, Director of the University of Miami's Marine Laboratory (now the Rosentiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences) and with Spessard L. Holland, Governor of Florida in the early 1940's.

Houghton, A. S., 1866-1948

Aviation ephemera collection

  • ASM0149
  • Collection
  • 1919-1945

The Aviation ephemera collection contains posters, reports, postcards, brochures, programs, pamphlets, and other ephemera from all parts of the globe relating to the subject of aviation and its vast history.

A.W. Kopp autograph collection

  • ASM0608
  • Collection
  • 1784-1921

The A. W. Kopp autograph collection contains three books of autographs and various loose autographs. One book is dated 1909 to 1910 and contains an autograph of Gustav Mahler and Sergei Rachmaninoff (with an accompanying musical quote), one is dated 1914 to 1917 and contains an autograph of U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, and one is dated 1917 to 1921 and contains an autograph of Harry Houdini, Edgar Lee Hay, and Marjory Stoneman Douglas. Among the loose autographs, there are ones of Daniel Webster and Oliver Wendell Holmes. Also included are a book of receipts from New York dated 1784 to 1786, a book of poetry from residents of Danzig dated 1833 to 1853.

Bailey Diffie papers

  • ASM0057
  • Collection
  • 1941-1977

The Bailey Diffie Papers include manuscripts, notes, copies, correspondence, classroom materials, bibliographies and other materials related to Diffie's research, teaching and publications on Latin America and the Caribbean.

Diffie, Bailey W., 1902-1983

Barnott Family papers

  • ASM0760
  • Collection
  • 1882-1901

This collection contains correspondence from the Barnott family, primarily letters to and from Mary A. Barnott, the wife of Edward Barnott. The two of them were early settlers of the Biscayne Bay area in the 1870s, and the family's letters document much of the day-to-day affairs of life in Miami at the turn of the 20th century. They were also close friends with William H. Gleason, the founder of the Biscayne community, and his family, all of whose correspondence with the Barnotts can be found in this collection. Furthermore, the collection contains other archival materials, such as clippings, notes, old checks, and advertisements.

Barnott, Mary A.

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