Library Art

Title

Library Art

Subject

Peabody Institute (Peabody, Mass.)

Creator

Local History Resource Center at the Peabody Institute Library

Rights

All copyrights belong the Peabody Institute Library

Collection Items

"After the Storm"
Located to the right of the Information Desk is Gruppe’s After the Storm. Emile Gruppe was one of America’s most prolific artists. Gruppe estimated that he destroyed nearly 2000 canvasses and still managed to paint over 8000 paintings. Part of the…

Welcome to the Peabody Institute Library, one of the first free libraries in the nation.

In 1852, George Peabody, who was born just a mile down Washington Street, donated $10,000 for the creation of the first Peabody Institute. By the time of his…

Library Foyer
As you enter the library’s foyer, notice the stencils decorating the upper corners of the doorway leading into the circulation area. During the first floor renovation in 2011, ceiling stencils used over a century before were found in what is…

"Gloucester Morning"
Continue just through the doors into the first floor lobby. Immediately to your right, hanging behind the Circulation Desk in the Assistant Director’s Office, is Emile Gruppe’s Gloucester Morning. Gruppe was born in Rochester, New York in 1896. His…

"Distress"
Positioned over the microfilm case located just beyond the Circulation Desk is Gruppe’s painting, "Distress". His years in Gloucester gave Gruppe a vivid awareness of the dangers the local fishermen faced. In the years between his arrival in…

"Hauling the Nets"
To the left of the Information Desk is Emile Gruppe’s painting, "Hauling the Nets". Like many of his other paintings, there are many works by Gruppe with this title. In addition to capturing the same scene from different angles, Gruppe was drawn to…

South Danvers in 1828
Just behind the Information Desk is the painting, "South Danvers in 1828." Until recently, this work was attributed to Gideon Foster Jr. (1782-1865). However, there is indication that the artist was Nathan Lakeman Sr.. (1804-1835) who was a member of…

Portrait of Queen Victoria
At the rear of the First Floor Lobby, we come to one of the Library’s most prized works of art, the Portrait of Queen Victoria. When George Peabody donated over $2 million to create housing for the poor of London, Queen Victoria wished to find a way…

Portrait of Gideon Foster
In the Trustee’s Room is our next work of art, Portrait of Gideon Foster by Charles Osgood (1809-1891). Charles Osgood was born in Salem and became a well known portrait artist. His most famous work is a portrait of Nathaniel Hawthorne, which is now…

George Peabody
Continuing onto the first floor elevator lobby, in the space to the left of the elevator is the George Peabody Portrait. The painting was restored with funds from the Community Preservation Act and the Peabody Institute Library Foundation.

This…
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