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The New Yorker is 100 years old this year

“On February 22, 2025, A Century of The New Yorker will open at The New York Public Library, showcasing the history of The New Yorker from its launch in 1925 to present day and bringing to life the people, stories, and ideas that have defined the iconic magazine. Founding documents, rare manuscripts, photographs, and timeless cover and cartoon art drawn from the Library’s rich holdings, along with artifacts from other renowned institutions, will feature in the dynamic exhibition, which will take visitors behind the scenes of the making of one of the United States’s most important magazines. The exhibition will explore the literary cosmopolitanism The New Yorker forged throughout its one-hundred-year history, from the roaring twenties through the digital age, and highlight the role of both well-known creators such as E.B. White and Vladimir Nabokov as well as underrepresented and unsung contributors—from artists and copyeditors to typists and fact checkers. A Century of The New Yorker will be a centerpiece of The New Yorker’s centenary, a year-long celebration that will begin February 2025 and will include “Tales From The New Yorker,” a film series at Film Forum, and the digitization of the magazine’s hundred-year archive, among other programming and events.  The New York Public Library is the home of the New Yorker records, which it acquired in 1991. The archive includes over 2,500 boxes, or 1,058 linear feet, and is one of the Library’s largest and most-used archival collections. The exhibition will draw on the Library’s rich archives related to the magazine and its writers and editors. Additionally, The New Yorker provided rare documents and artifacts from its own holdings to supplement the Library’s. “In ways we see and don’t see, The New Yorker has shaped so many aspects of American culture, politics, and intellectual life over the past century,” said Julie Golia, Associate Director, Manuscripts, Archives, and Rare Books and Charles J. Liebman Curator of Manuscripts, the co-curator of the exhibition. “A Century of The New Yorker invites the Library’s visitors into the pages of the magazine, revealing the fascinating history of the country’s most important magazine through our rich collections.” “Countless have been influenced by The New Yorker and delighted in its pages of groundbreaking journalism and irreverent cartoon art. As the home of the New Yorker records, The New York Public Library is the steward and preserver of the magazine’s one-hundred-year history,” said Anthony W. Marx, President of The New York Public Library. “I’m thrilled that visitors to the Library will be able to access the records through A Century of The New Yorker and see up-close how the renowned magazine has shaped intellectual life and cultural history in the United States.”

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