Drawings
Found in 38 Collections and/or Records:
Bedtime
Original pen and ink drawing, initialed, and dated 24 Feb. 1893. The item depicts a mother mouse holding a baby mouse with two other mice in a cradle. This is one of a set of six drawings intended to illustrate "There was an old woman who lived in a shoe," which was never published. It was later used in "Appley Dapply's Nursery Rhymes." It was also used in "The Tale of Two Bad Mice."
Henry N. Christiansen papers
The Henry N. Christiansen papers contain maps and notes on projects that Henry N. Christiansen worked on.
Collection of photographs of William Wordsworth and his homes and haunts
Collection of Victorian and Edwardian manuscripts
Original drawings, sketches, and sketch books. Most of the items deal with scenes in England. Many have been published as illustrations for newspapers, magazines, and books. The dates of composition of these materials are uncertain.
Collection on Brigham Young University theatre productions
Group images of cast members in plays performed at BYU. Includes photograph of cast from "You Can't Take It with You"; drawing of cast of "Together Again for the First Time"; and watercolor of cast of "A Marriage-Go-Round."
Come now and let us reason together saith the Lord mural
Contains drawings, reports, and newspaper articles concerning the children's mural.
Cecil B. DeMille papers
Walter Crane drawing
An original drawing in two sections on tracing paper depecting the title page of "Walter Crane's Painting Book." The item was taken from the Edmund Evans scrapbook.
Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton drawings
Original color drawings to illustrate Lytton's novels. They are entitled: The Caxtons, The Coming Race, Devereux, Eugene Aram, Falkland, Godolphin, Kenelm Chillingley, Lucretia, Zanoni, and A Strange Story.
Franklin Folsom papers
Research notes, photocopies of drawings and photographs, a script, articles, correspondence, and archaeological site reports. The materials relate to Folsom's research on Indians of North America including antiquities and arrow heads, primarily in the American Southwest.