Mak, Pollack and 'A Cabinet of Curiosity'

Photo by Bonnie Mak
Bonnie Mak
Bonnie Mak, Associate Professor

Champaign’s Figure One Gallery celebrates the opening of "A Cabinet of Curiosity: The Library's Dead Time," an exhibit created by GSLIS Assistant Professor Bonnie Mak and master's student Julia Pollack. The exhibit will be held at the gallery's downtown Champaign location (116 N. Walnut) on February 17-18 from 5:00-9:00pm. GSLIS will sponsor a reception on Friday evening.

[image1-left:resize-300w]The cabinet of curiosity was a room in which early-modern collectors could experiment with different ways of ordering the universe. Contents of the cabinet might include specimens from nature—real or fake.

Pollack and Mak have brought together their own cabinet of curiosity and filled it with examples of librarianship that are regularly overlooked in the daily course of activities in the library. As an alternative archive of librarianship, the "artefacts" in Pollack and Mak's cabinet reveal the ways in which information continues to be carefully formulated and prepared for consumption—not only in the library, but also elsewhere.

Guided tours of the artwork will discuss the practices of the librarian in the collection, classification, and curation of information.

Julia Pollack is an artist, a GSLIS master’s student, and a graduate assistant in reference instruction at the University of Illinois. Her work, “The Universal Standard Encyclopedia,” was recently featured in Accepted Knowing: Peer Review at the Figure One Gallery. Bonnie Mak is assistant professor of library and information science at the University of Illinois, and holds a joint appointment in the Program for Medieval Studies. Her book, How the Page Matters, was published by the University of Toronto Press in 2011.

Research Areas:
Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

iSchool alumni and student named 2025 Movers & Shakers

Two iSchool alumni and an MSLIS student are included in Library Journal's 2025 class of Movers & Shakers, an annual list that recognizes 50 professionals who are moving the library field forward as a profession. Leah Gregory (MSLIS '04) was honored in the Advocates category, Billy Tringali (MSLIS '19) was honored in the Innovators category, and University Library Assistant Professor and Digital Humanities Librarian Mary Ton (current MSLIS student) was honored in the Educators category.

Spectrum Scholar Spotlight: Dalia Ortiz Pon

Twelve iSchool master's students were named 2024–2025 Spectrum Scholars by the American Library Association (ALA) Office for Diversity, Literacy, and Outreach Services. This "Spectrum Scholar Spotlight" series highlights the School's scholars. MSLIS student Dalia Ortiz Pon earned her bachelor's degree in Latina/Latino studies from San Francisco State University. 

Dalia Ortiz Pon

Debnath datafies "The Bulletin"

MSIM student Tan Debnath, whose interests span data mining, statistical modeling, text mining, and digital humanities, joined the Center for Children's books as a research assistant. He was tasked with building curation processes that would datafy seventy-five years' worth of archival issues of The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, one of the nation's leading children's book review journals.

Tan Debnath stands casually with his hands in his pockets and smiles broadly at the camera. It's a sunny day

He receives Amazon Research Award to improve monitoring of Earth’s ecosystem

A new project led by Professor Jingrui He aims to help scientists monitor disruptions to the Earth’s ecosystem, such as climate change. She recently received support for her work through an Amazon Research Award, which includes $60,000 in cash and an additional $40,000 in Amazon Web Services (AWS) credits.

Jingrui He

iSchool undergraduates selected as 2025 Community-Academic Scholars

The Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute (IHSI) has selected BSIS student Dhanvi Puttur and BSIS+DS student Lara Terpetschnig as 2025 Community-Academic Scholars. Representing nineteen majors and nine minors in eight colleges and schools at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and two additional universities, the eighteen scholars in this cohort encompass diverse fields of study, from community health to graphic design to statistics. 

BSIS+DS student Lara Terpetschnig and BSIS student Dhanvi Puttur