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Are We There Yet?

05/25/2009

Indianapolis Speedway, 1911

To kick off the summer traveling season, the Lilly Library opens an exhibition today featuring collections relating to early automobiles and motor cars. Are We There Yet? The Age of the Automobile showcases vintage catalogs, books, and materials featuring topics ranging from luxury roadsters to the first Indianapolis 500.

 

The exhibition opens Tuesday, May 26, and runs through September 5.

 

Lavish catalogs aimed at Gatsby-like customers come from the collection of Thomas T. Solley. Solley was director of the Indiana University Art Museum from 1971 to 1986 and a grand-nephew of J. K. Lilly, Jr., early benefactor of the library that bears his family name.

 

Solley’s collection shows how luxury-car catalogs blossomed as an art form at the turn of the twentieth century. Faced with growing competition to sell automobiles, manufacturers introduced lithography, photo-mechanical reproduction, and special leather-tooled bindings to lure prospective buyers.

 

“The automobile is such a part of our national identity,” says Becky Cape, head of public services at the Lilly Library, “and yet the industry is in crisis. It’s especially interesting to revisit auto history not only in Indiana but also around the world.”

 

In the early twentieth century, Cape says, Indiana was at the center of the automobile industry, rivaling Michigan as the country’s automobile manufacturing giant. In all, more than 250 makes of cars were produced in more than 40 Indiana cities and towns.

 

Although the Great Depression brought the downfall of most Hoosier automakers, Indiana’s automobile legacy continues through one of the best-known auto races, the Indianapolis 500, first run in 1911.

 

Some of Cape’s favorite parts of the exhibition describe how women influenced the industry and the market. Electricity powered some of the earliest cars, Cape says, and women were encouraged to drive them because they were slower and cleaner.

 

At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the famed French auto-maker Peugeot manufactured crinoline dresses, which required steel rods, before producing umbrella frames, wire wheels, bicycles, and finally, cars.

 

The exhibition was curated by Madeleine Thompson assisted by Cape.

 

The Lilly Library is Indiana University's library for rare books and special collections and one of the 18 libraries of the Indiana University Bloomington Libraries. It is located on Seventh Street south of Showalter Fountain on the Indiana University campus in Bloomington. Hours are Monday through Friday, 9:00-6:00, and Saturday, 9:00-1:00. For more information call (812) 855-2452. Free and open to the public.