Arab Times

Oxford unveils UK’s first major Tolkien expo

Once-in-a-generation exhibition features author’s unseen objects

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OXFORD, United Kingdom, June 2, (AFP): The University of Oxford was set to unveil Friday a “once-in-a-generation” exhibition of materials related to “The Lord of the Rings” author J. R. R. Tolkien, featuring previously unseen objects from several countries.

“Tolkien: Maker of Middle-earth”, which opened in its Bodleian Libraries, presents manuscript­s, artworks, maps, letters and artefacts in the biggest display in decades on the beloved British author — whose works gave rise to the hugely successful film series.

Some of the exhibits are returning to Oxford — where Tolkien spent most of his adult life — for the first time since his death in the historic English city in 1973.

“What we wanted to show was Tolkien’s original work, stripping back interpreta­tions to where it all started,” curator Catherine McIlwaine, Tolkien archivist at the libraries, told AFP.

The displays showcase the range of John Ronald Reuel Tolkien’s output, from early abstract paintings and tales he wrote for his children, to material related to works published posthumous­ly.

“Tolkien has always been a global phenomenon... even when he was alive,” said Richard Ovenden, who heads the libraries.

“And we’re really the only institutio­n that can do this, having far and away the largest collection­s of Tolkien materials.”

Research

Bodleian — the university’s main research library — has presented much of this extensive archive, alongside interactiv­e elements such as a three-dimensiona­l map of his imagined “middle-earth”.

But among the centrepiec­es of the exhibition are some loans: rare draft manuscript­s and exquisite illustrati­ons for “The Hobbit” — Tolkien’s breakthrou­gh published in 1937 — and his 1954 follow-up “The Lord of the Rings”.

The displays, which also include his own stunning draft book jacket designs for the works, were borrowed from Marquette University, a Catholic institutio­n in the US state of Wisconsin.

It acquired them from Tolkien in the late 1950s.

“To bring those back to Oxford for the first time in 60 years (we knew) was just going to be extraordin­ary,” McIlwaine added.

“We thought that’s going to make it a really special exhibition that hasn’t been done before.”

She estimates at least a third of the 200 items in the exhibition, which took her five years to organise, have never been seen publicly before.

Personal aspects of his life are evoked, including childhood and student days, his career as a scholar of literature, and his family life.

The displays include numerous items loaned by his third son Christophe­r Tolkien, notably the writing Gandalf, who was originally called Bladorthin.

Bodleian organisers hope visitors will also explore Tolkien’s relationsh­ip with Oxford.

Born in South Africa, he was raised in and around Birmingham but arrived

A photograph of British author J.R.R. Tolkien at the age of 19 is seen on display during a preview of

the exhibition. (AFP)

in Oxford as an undergradu­ate at Exeter College.

He returned as a professor of English language and literature at Merton College, becoming friends with other rising literary figures there, including C. S. Lewis.

The university professor with a consuming passion for rare, historical languages and a vivid imaginatio­n, is also buried in Wolvercote Cemetery in a northern suburb.

Legions of fans flock there to lay flowers at his grave.

“I think Oxford really did help to provide the framework in which he was able to flourish as a literary genius,” said Ovenden.

The exhibition runs until Oct 28 and hopes to attract 100,000 visitors.

Bodleian will then collaborat­e with the Morgan Library and Museum in the United States, and the National Library of France, which are both planning on similar Tolkien exhibition­s in 2019.

“The popularity of Tolkien just doesn’t seem to wane,” said McIlwaine, as she prepared to welcome Tolkien family members to cut the ribbon on the Oxford exhibition.

 ??  ?? An illustrati­on entitled ‘Roverandom Illustrati­on’ by British author J. R. R. Tolkien is seen during a preview of the exhibition Tolkien: Maker of Middle-earth
at Weston Library, part of the Bodleian Library in Oxford, west of London on May 31, 2018....
An illustrati­on entitled ‘Roverandom Illustrati­on’ by British author J. R. R. Tolkien is seen during a preview of the exhibition Tolkien: Maker of Middle-earth at Weston Library, part of the Bodleian Library in Oxford, west of London on May 31, 2018....
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