Carroll Glenn Photos
Scope and Contents note
Photography has always been important to the National Music Camp, and photos exist from the earliest years of the Camp. Beginning in circa 1944, a concerted effort was made each year to fully document camp life. A professional photographer was on site throughout the season, taking high quality, usually staged, photographs. These consisted of group shots of each of the camper cabins, and numerous individual shots of campers and instructors. These photos were developed on-site in the campus darkroom.
The campers at NMC were divided into age groups called Junior, Intermediate and High School. There was also a University contingent from the University of Michigan for many years. The sequence of negatives reflects these divisions. Two other typical divisions are General camp photos and Post-camp photos. General photos are often simply of the High Schoolers who constituted the majority of the campers at NMC, but also include more generic and candid shots of camp life. Post-camp indicates that camp had concluded, and these photos document the routines associated with closing down the camp for the summer.
When the Arts Academy began in the 1962-63 school year, the tradition of photography was continued, and similar high-quality shots were taken of the students. Theses are generally all numbered sequentially, and not divided into the four classes of Freshman, Sophomore, etc. It was around this time that the 4 x 5 large format was supplemented, and then supplanted, by the 120 film medium format, approximately 2.25" x 2.25".
Dates
- 2018-07-27
Biographical / Historical
Elizabeth Carroll Glenn was an American violinist and music educator. At age 11, Glenn moved to New York to study with Edouard Déthier at the Juilliard School through a cooperative program with the New Lincoln School, an experimental K-12 program operated by Teachers College, Columbia University. She graduated from Juilliard at age 15 with the faculty scholarship award, and subsequently continued graduate studies at Juilliard. Glenn won the Naumburg Violin Competition in April 1938 and, as part of her prize, the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation sponsored her post-Juilliard New York debut recital at the Town Hall on November 7, 1938. She debuted with the New York Philharmonic under Artur Rodziński on December 14, 1941, performing the Sibelius Violin Concerto, with critical success. During her 1942–1943 season, Glenn was featured in 21 orchestral concerts throughout North America. She married pianist Eugene List in 1943, and they concertized together in 1946, when the U.S. State Department sponsored their first European tour. Glenn and List attracted vast audiences during the 1946 summer concerts of the Philadelphia Orchestra at the Robin Hood Dell and during 1948 and 1949 concerts of the New York Philharmonic at Lewisohn Stadium. In 1963, Glenn became Artist in Residence at the University of North Texas College of Music,[12] and also taught at Temple University, the Interlochen Center for the Arts, and the Eastman School of Music (1964–1975).
Extent
4 Megabytes : 1 - 8" x 10" - b&w print of Glenn, full-body, posing with her violin 1 - 8" x 10" - b&w print of Glenn, close up, looking at her violin 1 - 8" x 10" - b&w print of Glenn, holding her violin and standing next to husband Eugene List, sitting at piano 1 - 8" x 10" - b&w print of Glenn & husband Eugene List sitting at piano
Language of Materials
English
General
8" x 10" - print of Carroll Glenn (right), holding her violin and standing next to husband Eugene List (left), sitting at piano 8" x 10" - print of Carroll Glenn (right) and husband Eugene List (left) sitting at piano
Repository Details
Part of the Archives of Interlochen Center for the Arts Repository
Bonisteel Library
4000 Highway M-137
Interlochen MI 49643 USA
231-276-4384
leo.gillis@interlochen.org