Nowadays, store-bought
Valentines cards may dominate the ways we tell people we love them in writing,
but in the past the diversity of notes reveals different ideas about love.
Claire Voon
Flowers wilt and chocolate
boxes inevitably empty, but a written note that expresses love can last
centuries, if not longer. For over four decades, the collector Nancy Rosin
amassed an enormous trove of paper valentines created between 1684 and 1970.
Now, just in time for Valentine’s Day, the Huntington Library, Art Collections,
and Botanical Gardens has announced that it has acquired her unique collection.
Donated by Rosin’s family,
The Nancy and Henry Rosin Collection of Valentine, Friendship, and Devotional
Ephemera is considered the “best private collection of its kind in the world,”
according to the Huntington. It comprises about 12,300 traces of exchanged
intimacy, from friendly greetings to arduous affirmations of desire, conveyed
through well-preserved cards of all kinds.
Included are carefully
handcrafted cards, from Pennsylvania-German folded love tokens to cobweb cards
— named for their delicate paper spirals that lift to form a cage and reveal a
hidden message. (One that Rosin collected opens to show something very curious:
a dangling mouse.) There are 18th-century lace-trimmed, devotional cards
hand-cut by French and German nuns, who sold these to raise money. There are
also — to diversify the collection’s messages — vinegar valentines, those nasty
cards that Victorians sent to people they disliked. Here’s a taste of a savage
one sent from a moralistic scribe:
On each Sunday morning to
church you repair, And turn up your nose with a sanctified air, But see you at
home what a different sight, As you read nasty books and drink gin half the
night, While you ne’er give poor people enough for a dinner, You hypocritical
wicked old Sinner.
Sometimes simply playful or
sarcastic, vinegar valentines exemplify the variety of material Rosin’s
collection offers.
“It is without a doubt the
best in private hands in terms of quality and range within its focus — to say
nothing of the sheer wonder and delight the items provide,” the Library’s
Curator of Graphic Arts and Social History David Mihaly said. “Pull a string
and an ingenious cobweb device lifts to reveal a mouse in a trap; unfold a
die-cut valentine and watch a majestic carriage spring to life in 3-D; read a
witty poem and realize it’s a hilarious jab at a Victorian-era politician; look
closely at a tiny, centuries-old card and see it was delicately perforated with
hundreds of tiny pinpricks, and hand painted so expertly.”
The Library will now
research and process the collection, and while there are no current plans to
display the objects, curators hope to organize an exhibition dedicated to them
in the coming years. For now, those planning to send a loved one a special
Valentine’s card can draw some inspiration from these centuries-old tokens.
https://hyperallergic.com/426589/nancy-and-henry-rosin-collection-of-valentine-friendship-and-devotional-ephemera/?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feb%2014%202018%20daily%20-%20My%20Unexpected%20Valentines%20Day%20with%20Louise%20Bourgeois&utm_content=Feb%2014%202018%20daily%20-%20My%20Unexpected%20Valentines%20Day%20with%20Louise%20Bourgeois+CID_57ee011c2b048661bea55f6d69359ac6&utm_source=HyperallergicNewsletter
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