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The Library of the Barber Institute of Fine Arts at the University of Birmingham

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2016

David Pulford*
Affiliation:
Library Services, Academic Services, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK
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Abstract

The Barber Institute of Fine Arts is acknowledged as one of the finest small art galleries in Europe. It has a richly resourced library which functions both as a curatorial library for the Barber’s curators and as part of the University of Birmingham’s network of site libraries. Students of art history thus benefit from the combined resources of a specialist art gallery library and a major university library. The Barber also houses a visual resources library, music library and coin study room.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 2010

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References

1. According to The Observer newspaper.Google Scholar
2. From an obituary quoted in Miles, Hamish, Art in the University: The early history of the Barber Institute (Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 1972), 8.Google Scholar
3. Summerson, John, ‘The architecture of British museums and art galleries’ in The fine and decorative art collections of Britain and Ireland, ed. Chapel, J. and Gere, C. (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1985),Google Scholar
Spencer-Longhurst, Paul, Robert Atkinson 1883-1952 (London: Architectural Association, 1989), 13.Google Scholar
4. Roberts, H. M., ‘The Barber Institute Library,’ ARLIS newsletter, no. 19 (1974): 56.Google Scholar
5. The 2010 exhibition Print power: the religious, the social & the body in twentieth-century works on paper will be held 10 June-1 August. Previous exhibitions have been: Building the future: Birmingham’s architectural story (2009); Publicity and perversity: the English satirical print 1750-1950 (2008); Art and the periodical: an exhibition of modern magazines (2007); Travel by the book: eighteenth-century illustrated travel writing (2006) and Art and migration: art works by refugee artists from Nazi Germany in Britain (2005).Google Scholar