Brontë 200 - Charlotte Brontë - An Independent Will

At the Morgan Library & Museum, New York

Showing:
September 09th 2016 10:00am - January 02nd 2017 05:00pm

At the Morgan Library & Museum, New York

CHARLOTTE BRONTË'S LIFE AND WRITINGS SHOWCASED IN MAJOR NEW EXHIBITION AT THE MORGAN
Organised in collaboration with the Brontë Parsonage Museum and the National Portrait Gallery, London

Charlotte Brontë: An Independent Will
September 9, 2016 through January 2, 2017

From the time Charlotte Brontë's novel Jane Eyre was first published in 1847, readers have been drawn to the orphan protagonist who declared herself "a free human being with an independent will." Like her famous fictional creation, Brontë herself took bold steps throughout her life to pursue personal and professional fufillment. Charlotte Brontë: An Independent Will, a new exhibition opening at the Morgan Library & Museum on September 9, traces the writer's life from imaginative teeanger to reluctant governess to published poet and masterful novelist.

The exhibition celebrates the two-hundredth anniversary of Brontë's birth in 1816, and marks an historic collaboration between the Morgan, which holds one of the world's most important collections of Brontë mansucripts and letters, and the Brontë Parsonage Museum, in Haworth, England, which will lend a variety of key items including the author's earliest surviving miniature manuscript, her portable writing desk and paintbox, and a blue floral dress she wore in the 1850s. The centrepiece of the exhibition is a portion of the original mansucript of Jane Eyre, on loan from the British Library and being shown in the U.S. for the first time, open to the page on which Jane asserts her "independent will". Also shown for the first time in America will be the only two life portraits of Brontë, on loan from London's National Portrait Gallery.

"With Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë introduced one of the strongest - and most unforgettable - heroines in all literature," said Colin B. Bailey, director of the Morgan. "Brontë herself was uncommonly ambitious, pursuing literary fame in a male-dominated profession and insisting that her work be judged on its own terms. The Morgan is very pleased to be able to tell her remarkable story and to explore her legacy in this important exhibition."
‹‹ Back to Events