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Romana Javitz


Romana Javitz (1903–1980) was an American artist, librarian, and Superintendent of the Picture Collection at the New York Public Library.

Romana Javitz was born in Russia to Polish parents and immigrated to America as a child. Her mother, Malvine, was a hat milliner and her father, Elias, maintained an import/export business. She grew up in the Bronx and the Upper West Side of Manhattan. She studied painting at the Art Student’s League and began working at the New York Public Library (NYPL) in the Children’s Room in 1919.

Javitz was interested in how libraries and museums documented folk art and brought attention to the documentation of African-American folk art at the NYPL after viewing European cities documentation in the 1920s. In 1929, she became superintendent of the Picture Collection at the NYPL. She held the position until she retired in 1968. In the 1930s she assisted Arthur Alfonso Schomburg, Curator of the Library’s Division of Negro History, Literature and Prints, by reviewing the collection to find important prints, photographs, and plates of African-American subjects. During her tenure, she instituted important innovations including requesting pictures with drawings on a call slip to locate the material and streamlined the process of adding new materials to the library with a team of artists and catalog card index.

In 1935, Javitz worked with Ruth Reeves, to create the Index of American Design that was part of the Works Progress Administration’s Federal Art Project. The project was founded in the idea that modern designers, like Reeves, were unable to find visual resources from American material culture at libraries and other institutions. Javitz and Reeves hired unemployed artists and illustrators around the county to record the decorative arts of rural and urban regions of the U.S. The collection was later moved to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.


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