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Thomas J. Watson Library

Coordinates:40°46′45″N73°57′47″W / 40.779165°N 73.962928°W /40.779165; -73.962928
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Research library of the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Thomas J. Watson Library
Wikipediaedit-a-thon held in the Thomas J. Watson Library (2017)
Map
Established1965 (1965)
Location1000 5th Ave, New York City, US
Coordinates40°46′45″N73°57′47″W / 40.779165°N 73.962928°W /40.779165; -73.962928
TypeNon-circulatingresearch library
Collection size1,020,000
DirectorKen Soehner (Chief Librarian)
ChairpersonOlivier Berggruen
Public transit accessSubway:"4" train"5" train"6" train"6" express train to86th Street
Bus:M1,M2,M3,M4,M79,M86
WebsiteLibrary website

TheThomas J. Watson Library is theresearch library of theMetropolitan Museum of Art, located in the main buildingThe Met Fifth Avenue. This library is not just home to extensive resources and materials on the decorative arts and architecture, but it also home to the many histories of art, with substantial holdings in modern European, ancient Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Asian, and Islamic art.

The Watson Library is named afterThomas J. Watson, the former chairman and CEO ofIBM from 1951 to 1956.[1] In addition to funding the library building that bears his name, Thomas J. Watson also endowed a book purchase fund and financed early automation projects in New York.

Departments

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Located on the first floor of the Met, the Watson Library can be visited without appointment. At the museum, each department also maintains its own internal library, most of which have materials that can be requested online through the Watson Library catalog. The collection is a closed-shelf reference library, and materials are not available for borrowing by the general public, but may be used in a secure reading room; some items may be borrowed by Met staffers.

The Lita Annenberg Hazen and Joseph H. Hazen Center for Electronic Resources is the first of its kind in any art museum around the world. The Hazen Center offers an extensive electronic collection of scholarly materials that include indexes, encyclopedias, dictionaries, full-text journals, and databases.

In addition, the Met hosts theNolen Library on its ground floor, a collection of 10,000 items in an open-shelf, non-circulating collection intended for the general public, including children. The Nolen Library also includes a large collection of children's books, as well as specialized curriculum materials for educators.

The Watson Library's collection contains over 1,020,000 volumes, including monographs and exhibition catalogs; over 21,000 periodical titles; and more than 140,000 auction and sale catalogs.[2] The library also includes a reference collection, a rare book collection, manuscript items, and vertical file collections. The library is accessible to anyone over 18, simply by registering online and providing a valid photo ID.[3] Once a free account is set up, a researcher may issue reserve requests online, in advance of an on-site visit, and may also issue requests in person at the library.

The library houses several display cases which are used for temporary exhibits of books and publications from its collections. Exhibits may focus on a single artist, an artistic movement, a publication medium or style, or any other topic of interest. Items which are on exhibit are clearly flagged in the online catalog as temporarily unavailable for use.

Digital collections

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The Watson Library seeks to expand access to rare and unique research materials by digitizing collections, targeting materials that are far outside the scope of other digital libraries and online archives. In doing so, the Watson Library hopes to support scholars, researchers, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art's staff.[4]

Highlights from the Digital Collections include but are not limited to:

  • Rare Books in The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries
  • Costume Institute
  • Excavations of the Late Roman and Early Byzantine Sites in the Kharga Oasis
  • Japanese Illustrated Books
  • Macbeth Gallery Exhibition Catalogs
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art Images
  • Museum of Primitive Art Publications
  • Rare Books Published in Imperial and early Soviet Russia
  • David Roentgen Papers, 1773-1820
  • Schools of the Metropolitan Museum of Art records, 1879-1895
  • Tiffany Publications and Ephemeral Materials

References

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  1. ^"IBM Archives: Interactive history". 03.ibm.com. 2010-11-11. Archived fromthe original on August 31, 2009. Retrieved2014-05-30.
  2. ^"Thomas J. Watson Library » About the Library". Metmuseum.org. Retrieved2024-11-07.
  3. ^"Thomas J. Watson Library » Blog Archive » Access and Hours". Libmma.org. 2007-07-21. Retrieved2014-05-30.
  4. ^"About the Digitization Initiative at The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries :: Digital Collections from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries". Libmma.contentdm.oclc.org. Retrieved2014-05-30.

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