Special Collections Exhibits

The Special Collections exhibits offer visitors an opportunity to experience the rich historical, photographic, and literary collections available at UMBC. In addition to the physical display areas in the Library Rotunda and the Special Collections Reading Room, exhibits are increasingly being hosted online.

The Library Gallery serves as one of the principal art galleries in the region. Items from the Special Collections Department, as well as art and artifacts from all over the world, are displayed in challenging and informative exhibitions for the University community and the public.

Reading Room

The exhibit space in the Special Collections Reading Room (rm 104) has developed into a space that highlights student-produced research and exhibits. Special Collections student assistants and interns work directly with faculty to select, arrange, describe, display and promote the exhibits.

Library Rotunda

Located on the first floor of the Library, this central display space is primarily used for the display of short-term Special Collections exhibits or extensions of the larger shows in the Library Gallery. UMBC faculty and departments interested in using the space should review and submit the Library Rotunda Exhibition Guidelines and Proposal Form to Special Collections by email at speccoll@umbc.edu.

Online exhibits

These online exhibits have been created by Special Collections volunteers, student assistants, and staff. The exhibits highlight the holdings of Special Collections and provide more detail and history about the materials and subject matter.

  • Eileen J. Garrett Parapsychology Foundation digital exhibition: This digital exhibition was created as part of the UMBC Interdisciplinary CoLab during the summer of 2024. The Eileen J. Garrett Parapsychology Foundation collection includes over 12,000 books, more than 100 periodicals, and other unique artifacts about a wide range of supernatural occurrences.
  • The UMBC LGBTQ+ Oral History Project seeks to gather stories of queer people at UMBC and in the larger Baltimore community as a way to preserve our histories. The collection currently has a particular focus on queer performance cultures in Baltimore and student experiences at UMBC. Student interviewers work with narrators to complete the oral history interviews, transcribe transcripts, and activate the oral histories with projects, including zines and podcast episodes.
  • Digital Cruikshank: This online exhibition features a wide sampling of work by George Cruikshank (1792-1878), England’s most prolific caricaturist and illustrator. The exhibition was curated by students in Dr. Lindsay DiCuirci’s Fall 2022 English seminar at the UMBC. 
  • Experimentalist: The Art of Robert Fichter: This online exhibit accompanies an exhibition presented at UMBC’s Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery from August 28-December 18, 2019. The exhibition represents the first retrospective of the artist’s career in over thirty years. Created between 1962 and 2006, the works reproduced here are drawn entirely from the Robert W. Fichter Archive at UMBC. The selection highlights the artist’s experimental approach to examining the human condition. Employing shifting moods and mediums as well as wit, humor, and satire, Fichter delivers trenchant critiques of war, nuclear proliferation, and environmental disaster. Firmly rooting his expressive compositions in a strong sense of place-the surreal landscapes of his native Florida-he presents a singular vision of humanity on the brink.

    The exhibition Experimentalist: The Art of Robert Fichter was curated by Tom Beck, Curator Emeritus. The presentation at the Library Gallery was organized by Beth Saunders, Curator, and Head of Special Collections.

    Online exhibit by Grace Ferguson. Texts by Tom Beck and Beth Saunders with Grace Ferguson.
  • The Radical Literature Collection at UMBC: This exhibit was created by 2021 Interdisciplinary CoLab participants Gabe Brunal, Avnee Sharma, and Sarah Nove. It includes original scholarships created by the 2021 CoLab participants.
  • The East Baltimore Documentary Photography Project records at UMBC: This exhibit was created by 2019 and 2022 Interdisciplinary CoLab participants: Ari Cacic, Ian Feldmann, Havish Maka, Pat Michael, Courtney Monaco, T. Sanders (2019); Nia Hopkins, Daniela Torres Romo, and Maria Yiannouris (2022). It includes digital stories, oral histories, and in-depth essays written by the CoLab participants.
  • The Coslet-Sapienza Collection of fanzines at UMBC: This exhibit was created by 2018 Interdisciplinary CoLab participants Marzuq Hakim, Ashley Mitchell, and Rebecca Wireman and goes into detail about our fanzine collection. It includes digital stories and in-depth essays written by the 2018 CoLab participants. Learn more about the CoLab project here.
  • Underwood and Underwood News Photography: This digital history exhibit was created by Jordan Ritchie, UMBC class of 2019, as part of her master’s thesis and is meant to inform and showcase the Underwood and Underwood Photography Company and photographs from UMBC’s Underwood and Underwood collection, which contains thousands of international news and wire service photos.
  • Sharing the Past, Building the Future: UMBC at 50: Learn about UMBC’s first 50 years, including a timeline, the founding, diversity, innovative academics and research, student activism, student publications, student life, athletics, True Grit (mascot), presidents and administration, and campus growth.
  • Science Fiction Pulps & Fanzines: View this online exhibit and learn more about science fiction in general, the origins of sci-fi pulp fiction, the sci-fi community, fanzines, and notable sci-fi authors.
  • Growing Baltimore: Images from the Hughes Company between the World War: Curated by three students from Denise Meringelo’s Spring 2011 HIST 705, Introduction to Public History. The exhibit uses the Hughes Company Glass Negative collection from UMBC’s Special Collections Department and examines the expansion and development in Baltimore after the 1918 annexation.
  • In the Archives: UMBC at 45: A sample of the records, photographs, publications, and pom-poms that document our shared campus history, presented in conjunction with American Archives Month and Homecoming 2011.
  • The Evolution of 20th Century Camera Technology from the William B. Cavanaugh Collection: This exhibit features historic cameras from the William B. Cavanaugh collection. Fascinated by cameras, Cavanaugh collected over 100 vintage cameras and camera accessories, twentieth-century cultural relics. His complete collection represents different advancements in the field of photography and technological developments that made photography easier, more accurate, and more accessible to the general public.
  • The Photography of John G. Bullock: presents an overview of nearly four decades of Bullock’s photography, and highlights some of the major themes that defined his work in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Curated by Special Collections student assistant Sarah Klimek in Spring 2015; adapted and migrated to a new platform in Spring 2021 by Special Collections graduate assistant Jessica Riley.