Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Reimagining the Cemetery as Museum | Page 11

Photographs From sweeping aerial shots of the grounds to detailed views of grave markers, the photographic collections at Mount Auburn document the Cemetery’s changing landscape and contribute greatly to our understanding of the history of Mount Auburn and the rural cemetery movement. The holdings include more than 15,000 prints and negatives and a large slide collection, chronicling Mount Auburn from the mid-nineteenth century to the present. Subjects include burials, monuments, mausolea, buildings, landscape, horticulture, wildlife, maintenance, staff, events, and programs. The formats and processes used to create these images span the history of photography, from stereographs, lantern slides, and glass-plate negatives to black-andwhite prints, 35mm slides, color prints, and digital images. The images come from a variety of sources including Cemetery records, superintendent 19th Century Cabinet Card reports, photograph albums, guidebooks, and general reference files, and the collection continues to grow. Of particular interest is the collection of nineteenthcentury stereo views; the twentieth-century Arthur C. Haskell Collection of black-and-white photographic prints; and a collection of color transparencies by Alan Chesney, President of Mount Auburn from 1968 to 1988. Fine and Decorative Arts Stained Glass The stained glass in Bigelow Chapel, commissioned by the Cemetery’s co-founder and second president, Jacob Bigelow, was created in 1845 and installed when the Chapel was erected in 1846. The Scottish firm Ballantine & Allan designed the two large windows—the chancel window in the north wall and the rose window in the south wall. The Bigelow windows are hand painted and leaded in the geometric style. They are the third earliest known examples of this firm’s work and the first to be shipped to the United States. The chancel window is set into a wood frame painted to look like stone, and the rose window is set into a cast-iron frame. The eight clerestory windows, which date from the 1920s, are set into cast-iron frames. For Story Chapel, the Cemetery commissioned stained glass from the Boston studio of Wilbur H. Burnham in the ornamental Gothic Revival grisaille pattern, dating to 1930; Boston artisan E. E. Sanborn designed the large chancel window with figures of Christ and saints, circa 1928. The opalescent windows date from the construction of the building in 1896–98. Significant Monument Collection A small number of the approximately sixty thousand memorials at Mount Auburn are highly significant, works that stand out as either rare, reflective of a historically significant era, representative of a known artist, associated with a noted individual, or valued by the community. These significant monuments are an essential part of our cultural landscape and many are in need of preservation work. Range of material from the Historical Collections on display as part of a past Cambridge Open Archives event. The Cemetery’s Fine and Decorative Arts include commissioned works as well as purchases and Displaying the Collections: A nineteenthgifts. Mount century porcelain pin tray featuring the Cemetery’s Egyptian Revival Gateway. Auburn holds several nineteenthcentury oil paintings, sculptures, and decorative artworks for Story and Bigelow Chapels, in addition to prints, watercolors, drawings, and contemporary works of art. Of note are an 1832 souvenir tea cup, a nineteenth-century china pin tray, and an 1849 girandole set with Bigelow Chapel as the motif. Researchers will also find among the holdings chapel textiles, forged iron tools, gatekeeper’s helmets, and award medals from the Massachusetts Horticultural Society. 2016 Volume 1 | 9