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Myron Bement Smith Collection

National Museum of Asian Art

Object Details

Creator
Smith, Myron Bement, 1897-1970
Names
Aga-Oglu, Mehmet, 1896-1949
Former owner
Blake, Marion Elizabeth
Names
Ettinghausen, Richard
Field, Henry
Herzfeld, Ernst, 1879-1948
Kuban, Dogan
Moe, Henry Allen
Pope, Arthur Upham, 1881-1969
Topic
Islamic architecture
Islamic Architecture-Turkey
Iran-description and travel
Iran-History 20th Century
Islamic Architecture-Middle East
Iran-social life and customs
United States-Social life and customs
Mosques
Architecture -- Iran
Provenance
Gift of Katherine Dennis Smith, transfered from National Anthropological Archives.
Creator
Smith, Myron Bement, 1897-1970
See more items in
Myron Bement Smith Collection
Summary
The Myron Bement Smith collection consists of two parts, the papers of Myron Bement Smith and his wife Katharine and the Islamic Archives. It contains substantial material about his field research in Italy in the 1920s and his years working on Islamic architecture in Iran in the 1930s. Letters describe the milieu in which he operated in Rochester NY and New York City in the 1920s and early 1930s; the Smiths' life in Iran from 1933 to 1937; and the extensive network of academic and social contacts that Myron and Katharine developed and maintained over his lifetime. The Islamic Archives was a project to which Smith devoted most of his professional life. It includes both original materials, such as his photographs and notes, and items acquired by him from other scholars or experts on Islamic art and architecture. Smith intended the Archives to serve as a resource for scholars interested in the architecture and art of the entire Islamic world although he also included some materials about non-Islamic architecture.
Biographical Note
Myron Bement Smith was born in Newark Valley, New York in 1897 and grew up in Rochester, New York. He died in Washington D.C. in 1970. He showed an early interest in drawing, and after graduation from high school, he worked as a draftsman for a Rochester architect. He served in the US Army Medical Corps in France during World War I and on return again worked as an architectural draftsman. He studied at Yale University from 1922 to 1926, earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. During summer vacations, he worked as draftsman or designer for architectural firms in New York City. After graduation, he received a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation grant and spent two years in Italy doing research on northern Italian brick and stone work. He used photography as an tool for his research and published several well-illustrated articles. On return he joined an architectural firm in Philadelphia and in 1931 became a registered architect in New York. He enrolled in Harvard University graduate school in 1929 pursuing a Master of Fine Arts degree. In April 1930, Smith was appointed Secretary of the newly created American Institute for Persian Art and Archaeology founded by Arthur Upham Pope and located in New York City. He had no prior academic or work experience in Islamic art or architecture, and his job entailed designing publications, arranging lectures, organizing exhibitions and fund raising. That summer he arranged an independent study course at Harvard University on Persian art and subsequently studied Persian language at Columbia University and attended graduate courses at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University. His work and academic credentials enabled him to compete successfully for a research fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies in 1933 to study Iranian Islamic architecture. Accompanied by his new bride Katharine Dennis, Smith left for Iran in 1933. They suffered a horrendous motor vehicle accident in Iraq en route and required a lengthy recuperation in Lebanon and Cyprus. The Smiths eventually arrived in Isfahan, Iran, where they established their "Expedition House," as Smith called it, in a rented faculty house at Stuart College. Smith's research consisted of meticulous photographic documentation of Islamic monuments and architectural sketches and drawings of many of them. He concentrated on the Isfahan area but also documented monuments elsewhere in Iran. Smith outfitted his station wagon as a combination camper and research vehicle in which he and his staff traveled widely. Katharine sometimes traveled with him but generally she remained in Isfahan managing the household and logistics for the "expedition." The Smiths left Iran in 1937. Smith published several articles about Iran's Islamic monuments based on his field research and in 1947 completed his PhD thesis for The Johns Hopkins University on the vault in Persian architecture. His professional career from 1938 until his death in 1970 consisted of a series of temporary academic positions, contract work and government or academic sponsored lecture tours and photographic exhibits. He had a long lasting relationship with the Library of Congress where he served as an Honorary Consultant from 1938 to 1940 and again from 1948 to 1970; from 1943 to 1944 he was Chief of the Iranian Section at the Library. Despite his lack of published material, Smith was well-known among academic, government and private citizens who worked, traveled or were otherwise interested Iran and the Islamic world. Smith developed an extensive network of professional and social contacts that dated from his early student days and increased markedly during his time at the Persian Institute and later in Iran. He kept in touch with them and they touted him to others who were interested in Iran or Islamic art and architecture. This network served him well in realizing his ambition of creating a resource for scholars that relied on photographs to document Islamic architecture. The Islamic Archives began with his own collection of photographs from his Iran research and grew to include all manner of photographic and other materials not only on the Islamic world but also other areas. Creating and managing the Archives became the main focus of Smith's professional life and career. In 1967 he received a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to revise his PhD thesis as a publishable manuscript but died before he could complete it.
Extent
192 Linear feet
Date
circa 1910-1970
Custodial History
Gift of Katharine Dennis Smith.
Archival Repository
Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archives
Identifier
FSA.A.04
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Citation
The Myron Bement Smith Collection, FSA A.04. National Museum of Asian Art Archives. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Gift of Katherine Dennis Smith.
Arrangement
The collection is arranged into 2 major series with further subseries. A third series inventories the outsized and miscellaneous materials. Series 1: Papers Subseries 1.1: Biographic Materials Subseries 1.2: Professional Experience Subseries 1.3: Notebooks, Journals and Appointment Books Subseries 1.4: Correspondence Subseries 1.5: Published and Unpublished Materials Subseries 1.6: Italy Research 1925, 1927-1928 Subseries 1.7: Iran Research 1933-1937 Subseries 1.8: Katharine Dennis Smith Papers and Correspondence Series 2: The Islamic Archives Subseries 2.1: Islamic Archives History, Collection Information Subseries 2.2: Resource Materials Iran Subseries 2.3: Resource Materials Other Islamic World and General Subseries 2.4: Myron Bement Smith Architectural Sketches, Plans and Notes, Iran, 1933-1937 Subseries 2.5: Myron Bement Smith Iran Photographs, Notebooks and Negative Registers Subseries 2.6: Country Photograph File Subseries 2.7: Lantern Slide Collection Subseries 2.8: Myron Bement Smith 35 mm Color Slides Subseries 2.9: Country 35 mm Color Slide File Subseries 2.10: Myron Bement Smith Negatives Subseries 2.11: Country Photograph Negatives Subseries 2.12: Antoin Sevruguin Photographs Series 3: Outsize and Miscellaneous Items Subseries 3.1: Map Case Drawers Subseries 3.2: Rolled Items Subseries 3.3 Items in Freezer Subseries 3.4 Smithsonian Copy Negatives
Processing Information
Processed by Dr. Elizabeth Graves.
Rights
Permission to publish, quote, or reproduce must be secured from the repository.
Scope and Contents
The Myron Bement Smith Collection consists of two parts, the papers of Myron Bement Smith and his wife Katharine and the Islamic Archives. The papers include some biographic material about Myron but little about his wife. Information on his academic and professional experience is sketchy and his diaries and appointment books often contain only sporadic entries. The papers contain substantial material about his field research in Italy in the 1920s and his years working on Islamic architecture in Iran in the 1930s. Correspondence comprises the largest and most potentially useful part of the papers. Letters describe the milieu in which he operated in Rochester, NY and New York City in the 1920s and early 1930s; the Smiths' life in Iran from 1933 to 1937; and the extensive network of academic and social contacts that Myron and Katharine developed and maintained over his lifetime. The Islamic Archives, formally entitled The Archive for Islamic Culture and Art, was a project to which Smith devoted most of his professional life. It includes both original materials, such as his photographs and notes, and items acquired by him from other scholars or experts on Islamic art and architecture. Most of the latter consists of photographs and slides. Smith intended the Archives to serve as a resource for scholars interested in the architecture and art of the entire Islamic world although he also included some materials about non-Islamic architecture. The core collection of the Archives consists of Smith's original photographs and architectural sketches of Iranian Islamic monuments made during his field research in the 1930s. He meticulously photographed the interior and exterior of monuments, including their decorative detail. Some of the photographic materials subsequently loaned, purchased, or donated to the Archives may enable scholars to document sites over time but in many cases the materials are poorly preserved or reproduced. A notable exception to this is the glassplate negatives and prints of 19th century Iranian photographer Antoin Sevruguin.
Restrictions
Collection is open for research.
Related Materials
The Antoin Sevruguin Photgraphs Ernst Herzfeld Papers Lionel B. Bier Drawings Lionel D. Bier and Carol Bier Photographs
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503512430630-1503512430688-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/dc3c8c950fe-250b-40df-b8c7-bcf788073968

In the Collection

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  • Portrait of Two Kurdish Women in Elaborate Costume

  • Mashad (Iran): Imam Reza Shrine Complex: Gawhar Shad Mosque

  • Isfahan (Iran): Si-o-Se pol or Pol-i Allah Verdi Khan (Allah Verdi Khan Bridge)

  • Men Viewing Moving Pictures in an Apparatus Commonly Known as a Shahr-i Farang

  • Tehran (Iran): Kakh-i Gulistan (Gulistan Palace Complex): Celebration Scene in the Garden

  • Taq-i Bustan (Iran): Sasanian Rock Reliefs, Large and Small Vaults with Investiture Reliefs of Khusro II and Shaphur III as well as Investiture Relief of Ardashir II on the Right

  • Tehran (Iran): Lalah Zar, Atabak's (Amin al-sultan) Residence

  • Upton Prints: 30-39

  • Tehran (Iran): Maydan-i Tupkhana (Canons Square): Bank-i Shahanshahi-i Iran (Imperial Bank of Persia)

  • Men Selling Textile Fabrics in Bazaar

  • Vicinity of Shahr-i Ray (Iran): Chasman-i-ali Mound: Qajar Rock Relief Depicting Fath Ali Shah

  • Studio Portrait: Mirza Ibrahim Ghafari (b.1861-d.1918)

  • Interior of Bowl

  • Tehran (Iran), Shimiran, Pul-i Rumi

  • Interior of Bowl (broken)

  • Figural Statue

  • Naqsh-i Rustam (Iran): Achaemenid Tomb of Darius I: Inside View of Vault

  • Tus (Iran): Haruniya Mausoleum

  • Two Men Seated on a Ridge

  • Townscape

  • Tehran (Iran): Maydan-i Mashq (Military Training Square), Qazaqkhana (Military Center)

  • Ta'ziya Performance

  • Tehran (Iran): Kakh-i Saltanat-abad (Saltanat-Abad Palace Complex): View of Hawz-Khana' i Saltanat-Abad

  • Studio Portrait: Three Wrestlers Taking the Pose

  • Tehran (Iran): Maydan-i Mashq (Shooting Range): Entrance Portal

  • Small Building with Conical Roof

  • Rasht (Iran): Friday (Jum'a) Mosque

  • Exterior of Minai Bowl

  • Possibly Province of Gilan (Iran): House in Ruins

  • Naqsh-i Rustam (Iran): Sasanian Relief Showing the Investiture of Ardashir I by the God Ahura Mazda (Hormizd)

  • Photograph of Two Bound, Illustrated Folio from a Shahnama, Depicting the Battle between Iranians and Turanians

  • Isfahan (Iran): Si-o-Se pol or Pol-i Allah Verdi Khan (Allah Verdi Khan Bridge)

  • Vicinity of Persepolis and Naqsh-i Rustam (Iran): Caravanserai (?)

  • Tehran (Iran), Kakh-i Gulistan (Gulistan Palace Complex), Talar-i Takht (Throne Room): Nasir Al-Din Shah Sitting on the Lower Step of Takht-I Tavoos or the Peacock Throne

  • Interior of Bowl

  • Qum (Iran): Gunbad-i Sabz: View of Seljuk Octogonal Brick Structures

  • Persepolis (Iran): Northwestern Corner of Terrace Complex and Outcrops of Unwrought Bedrock

  • Tehran (Iran): Kakh-i Sahibqaraniyya (Sahibqaraniyya palace complex): Nasir Al-Din Shah Receiving Report

  • Persepolis (Iran): Tomb of Artaxerxes II Mnemon (Tomb V)

  • Safid Rud Valley

  • Royal Banquet with Nasir Al-Din Shah's Brother, Abbas Mirza

  • Persepolis (Iran): Northern Wall of the Throne Hall (Talar-i Takht)

  • Men at a Campsite

  • Fragments of Jar and Bowl with Arabic Inscription

  • Bishapur (Iran): Sasanian Reliefs Depicting the Investiture of Shapur I: Detail View of Roman Emperor Philip the Arab Kneeling and the Trampled Bodies of Two Defeated Enemies: One is the Roman Emperor Gordian III (L) and the Other is Angra Mainyu (R)

  • Tehran (Iran): Cossack Brigade at Maydan-i Mashq (Shooting Square)

  • Tehran (Iran): Street in front of the Hotel Prevet

  • View of Zagros Mountains

  • Group Portrait: Staff of Imperial Bank of Iran

  • Tree-Lined Avenue Leading to a Gate and Garden

  • Province of Fars (Iran): Yazd-i Khast or Izad-Khast Complex: Side View of the Eastern Part of the Complex

  • Tree Lined Street with Carriages

  • Interior of Bowl with Animal Design

  • Shiraz (Iran) (?): Walls and Towers of the Citadel

  • Tehran (Iran): Darvaza-i Khurasan (Khurasan Gate)

  • Portrait of the Mirza Nasrullah Khan-i Na'ini (d. 1907), Known as Mushir al-Dawla

  • Unidentified Town, probably Located within the Alborz Mountain Range

  • Rayy (Iran): Zoroastrian Tower of Silence (Khamushan Tower)

  • Baghdad (Iraq): Mashhad al-Kazimiya

  • Girls Weaving a Carpet

  • Naqsh-i Rustam (Iran): Achaemenid Tomb of Darius I: Interior View of Vestibule with Vault on Right

  • Isfahan, Masjid-i Jomeh Ground Plan Sections, south corner, southwest riwaq south part, southwest riwaq west part and iwan-i qibla, ink drawings

  • Isfahan, Masjid-i Jomeh Miscellaneous Architectural Drawings, originals

  • Isfahan, Masjid-i Jomeh Iwan and Manar, architectural drawing

  • Isfahan, Masjid-i Jomeh Ground Plans, reproductions

  • United States Information Service Iran Photographs, 195 G, Iran, Varamin

  • Persia Geographic File, Isfahan Masjid-i Jomeh, general, sahn, iwans, riwaqs and domes

  • Isfahan, Masjid-i Jomeh Ground Plan, original ink drawing and copy

  • Isfahan, Masjid-i Jomeh Ground Plan by Schroeder, copy

  • Persian Monuments Large Photo File, Isfahan city, Masjid-i Jomeh part 3, Qibla iwan

  • Isfahan, Masjid-i Jomeh, "Dutchman for Vaulting," ink architectural drawings

  • Isfahan, Masjid-i Jomeh Miscellaneous Architectural Drawings, reproductions

  • Resource Materials Iran

  • Unidentified Village

  • Qum (Iran): Portal with Minarets

  • Tehran (Iran): Maydan-i Tupkhana (also known as Maydan-i Sipah or Square of Canons)

  • North of Tehran (Iran): Bagh-i Firdaws (Garden of Paradise) at Shimiran

  • Naqsh-i Rustam (Iran): Sasanian Reliefs Depicting the Triumph of Shapur I over Valerian, and Middle Persian Inscription of the High Priest Kartir (Antoin Sevruguin in Foreground)

  • Tehran (Iran): Kakh-i Gulistan (Gulistan Palace Complex), Front Courtyard: Salam Ceremony

  • Tehran (Iran): Kakh-i Gulistan (Gulistan Palace): View of the Garden

  • Workers Harvesting Rice

  • Naqsh-i Rustam (Iran): Fire Altars

  • Kutalipar Zan Pass of the Old Woman on Way to Persian Gulf

  • Ashraf or Behshahr (Iran): Summer Palace of Saahib-i Zaman

  • Tehran (Iran): Royal Puppet Show

  • Two Earthenware Jars with Painted and Raised Ornamentation

  • Tehran (Iran): Masjid-i Shah Abd al 'Azim (Shah Abd al 'Azim Mosque)

  • Nasir Al-Din Shah with Malijak(?) Holding a Gun

  • Exterior of Minai Bowl

  • Shahr-i Ray (Iran): North side of Naqar Khana, Tomb Tower

  • Jug, Two Jars, Bowl, and Animal Head

  • Qum (Iran): Hazrat-i Ma'suma Shrine Complex: View of Courtyard

  • Men on a Hunting Trip

  • Threshing

  • Portrait of a Dervish

  • Fragment of Enameled Copper Dish with Elaborate Ornamentation

  • Tehran (Iran): Kakh-i Gulistan (Gulistan Palace): Talar-i Salam or Talar-i Takht (Throne Room)

  • Shimiran (Iran): Nasir Al-Din Shah at Abshar-i Shimiran (Shimiran's Waterfall)

  • Taq-i Bustan (Iran): Sasanian Rock Reliefs, Right Side of the Interior of the Large Vault with Investiture Relief of Khusro II: Close View of Relief Panel Picturing the Stag Hunt

  • Group Portrait: Officials Posing with a German Junkers Airplane

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Myron Bement Smith Collection
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