Iowa Women's Archives
The Louise Noun-Mary Louise Smith Iowa Women's Archives is located on the third floor of the Main Library in the University of Iowa Libraries system in Iowa City, Iowa. It was funded when Louise Noun sold a Frida Kahlo painting titled "Self Portrait with Loose Hair" for $1.65 million through Christie's in New York on May 15, 1991. "It is fitting that the Archives was funded by the sale of a Frida Kahlo painting… Kahlo's paintings have been rescued from obscurity in recent years…the IWA was meant to rescue the papers of Iowa women from obscurity, neglect, or destruction…"
The Archives was officially established in 1992 and is named after its two founders, Noun and Mary Louise Smith.
History
While researching for her book,, Noun recognized a need for an archive that would hold women's papers and history. Noun "later shared with Mary Louise Smith her frustration about the scarcity of primary sources by and about women, and the two determined to establish a repository to document the experiences and achievements of women in Iowa."The Archives officially opened on October 28, 1992.
The first curator hired was Karen Mason, who is still working at the Archives in 2014. Mason has written papers discussing her work at the Archive. The Archive has four basic approaches to collecting papers. The Archive will publicize interest in women's papers, write letters of solicitation to individuals or groups, sponsor or attend events, or establish good working relationships with people around the state. The first collection initiative the Archive proceeded with was the African American women project in 1995, and the second was in 1998 - the Rural Women's Project.
The special projects listed below will go into more detail on the history of the Archives.
Special Projects
"Giving Our History A Home: A Celebration of African American Women in Iowa"
Source:As it is understood by the above Mission, the Archive was established to collect the papers of groups that were underrepresented in archives. After the first two years of collecting papers, the Archive noted it had only established a small collection of papers by African American women. By 1995, "the Archives was able to hire Kathryn Neal as assistant archivist to undertake the African American Women in Iowa Project." Neal created her own mission statement and plan to undertake the project of collecting papers of African American women from around the state. The plan for that project was "1. Establish a manuscripts acquisitions program for the collection of materials that pertain to African American women in Iowa; 2. Publicize the project using a variety of media methods; 3. Develop and implement an oral history program to record the experiences of African American women in Iowa; 4. Create a comprehensive guide to African American women's collections at the IWA." Through her 3 years working as an archivist, Neal was successful in accumulating a set of 50 papers for the collection.