The Huntington Library seeks a Curator of Early Printed Books to serve as a creative and collaborative professional in stewarding, developing, and interpreting its exceptional collection of books from the handpress era (ca. 1450-1800). The collections in this area have been thoughtfully developed over the last century and remain a major focus of the institution. The Library holds over 400,000 early printed books, including more than 5,000 incunabula. The Curator of Early Printed Books is also responsible for stewarding one of the world's largest collections of extra-illustrated books. The Curator of Early Printed Books is part of the Library’s unified Curatorial Department staff. S/he/they report to the Head of the Library Curatorial Department and will work closely with other curators with intersecting collection areas and scholarly expertise. The collections in this area are one of the world's richest sources for the printed record of Great Britain and the United States. Copies of more than a third of the known English editions through 1640 are present, and nearly a third from 1641-1700. These include multiples copies of the Shakespeare and Ben Jonson folios, many rare early quartos, and most of the play collections of John Philip Kemble and the Dukes of Devonshire. The Huntington is also home to the Bridgwater library, the oldest large family collection of England to survive virtually intact. The collections also include early Continental printed books, with almost a quarter retaining their original bindings. Beginning with the Gutenberg Bible on parchment, the collection also includes block books, uniquely decorated copies, rare Spanish imprints, 16th-century Mexican books, and printed atlases. The Huntington welcomes over one million visitors each year to its gardens, art galleries, and library exhibition halls, while also facilitating one of the largest scholarly fellowship programs in the United States. The library is considered one of the world’s great independent research libraries, with 12 million collection items across fourteen core intersecting collecting areas. Every year, researchers from some 30 countries make thousands of visits to the Library’s reading rooms. The successful candidate will demonstrate a background of working directly with people from diverse racial, ethnic, geographic, and socioeconomic backgrounds, using a welcoming, inclusive, and accessible approach. The successful applicant will also demonstrate an understanding of the role of special collection resources in contemporary scholarship, as well as an aptitude for the focused acquisition of collection materials in this field, and their imaginative interpretation through public exhibitions and talks for diverse audiences.
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Senior