Curated by Joe Diemer
October 2025-March 2026
Between May and October of 1851, more than six million people traveled to London to visit the Great Exhibition. The event transformed Hyde Park into a colossal display case, assembling objects from around the world within the glass walls and ceiling of the 990,000 square-foot Crystal Palace. Drawing from the Ruari McLean Collection at the Robertson Davies Library, The World in Glass Cases seeks to examine how people, objects, and nations were exhibited within the Crystal Palace as well as how the Crystal Palace was exhibited within Victorian print.
Bringing together an assortment of print objects published before, during, and after the event, this exhibition takes the materiality and cultural legacy of the Crystal Palace as grounds to reconsider the transparency of glass cases themselves. As you peruse the exhibition’s vitrines, I invite you to meditate on the mechanisms of curation and exhibition on display. What are the cultural values reflected by these necessarily partial representations of the Crystal Palace and its contents? And what are the curatorial values reflected by the near-invisible barriers that group some print objects together while keeping others apart?
View Full Digital Exhibit Here.