Art: My Castle on the Nile at the Main Public Library

















By Steve Rosen


On Friday, the main Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton (800 Vine St., Downtown) gets its 2011 exhibition season underway with My Castle on the Nile: Illustrated Sheet Music by Black Composers, 1828-1944. It will be up through Feb. 28 in the museum's Cincinnati Room. The show draws on sheet music from the library's extensive collection, featuring covers that are hand-drawn and often reproduced as brightly colored chromolithographs.

While it has work by such well-known figures as "Fats" Waller and Duke Ellington, it also delves deeper into the music's history. For instance, there is 1828 sheet music by Francis Johnson, the first African-American composer to have his works published in this form and to give racially integrated concerts. Also featured is 19th-century Tin Pan Alley composer Gussie Davis, a native Cincinnatian who wrote "Irene, Good Night" in 1886, made famous decades later in an altered version — called "Goodnight, Irene" — by the folksinger Leadbelly.

The show was curated by Theresa Leininger-Miller, assistant art history professor at UC who will give an opening lecture at 2 p.m. Saturday. For more information, call the Library's Geneology & History Department at 513-369-6905.

Go here for library hours and exhibit information.



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