Marginalia in cARTography.pdf Oct. 2014 | Page 6

In early 2011 Professor Matthew H. Edney, Osher Professor the Boston Public Library, the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library in the History of Cartography at the University of Southern at Saint John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota, the Osher Maine and Director of the History of Cartography Project here Map Library at the University of Southern Maine in Portland, the at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, approached me about American Geographical Society Library at University of Wisconsin– collaborating with the Chazen on an exhibition of historical Milwaukee, the Wisconsin Historical Society, the Cartography maps. Although I was very interested in bringing a discipline Lab and the Arthur H. Robinson Map Library in the Department to our audiences that is normally outside of the museum’s of Geography at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and the circle of activities, there was no one at the Chazen with the Department of Special Collections at the Memorial Library at the expertise to curate such an exhibition. Could we identify an University of Wisconsin–Madison. appropriate person? Again thanks to the efforts of Professor Support for this exhibition was provided by the Chazen Museum of Art Council and the Wisconsin Arts Board at the Research Center for the Humanities and Social Sciences with funds from the State of Wisconsin and the National at the Spanish National Research Council was appointed David Endowment for the Arts, the UW–Madison Institute for Woodward Memorial Fellow in the History of Cartography Research in the Humanities and the History of Cartography in 2012-2013. This generous fellowship, which was created to Project. Dr. Sáenz-López’s research was made possible thanks provide scholars with an opportunity to research and write on a PROLOGUE Edney, Dr. Sandra Sáenz-López Pérez, Postdoctoral Researcher to Arthur and Janet Holzheimer. subject related to the history of cartography using the resources Finally, I must acknowledge the hard work and contributions by and academic communities available through the Institute for various museum staff members, for all such projects are the result Research in the Humanities and the History of Cartography of team effort. Foremost, Mary Ann Fitzgerald, our exhibitions ()Aɽ