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It might be considered nosey to thumb through someone else's little black address book, but that doesn't bother Mary Savig, curator of manuscripts at the Smithsonian Archives of
American Art. "It _is_ very nosey and that's why I really enjoy doing it," she says. The "Little Black Books" of some major and minor American artists are currently
on view in a show at the Archives of American Art in Washington, D.C. "We can read correspondence and read diaries, and we can find out so much more about their process as artists,
their everyday lives," Savig explains. The books show "the importance of their social networks, and how they would learn from each other and push each other to experiment in new
ways." Address books are relics now, but a young Archives intern named Leah Humenuck says the concept sounds familiar: They're for "artists or famous people having mistresses
or something like that," Humenuck says. "Like a way to keep their affairs." Savig shows a pocket-size book American painter Palmer C. Hayden kept in Paris in the 1930s.
"He has French phrases that he jotted down as he went along," Savig says. "... He wrote 'I bet' in one, and even 'I love you.'" (You can see a page
from Hayden's address book in the slideshow at the top of the page). Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner's list of friends is a Who's Who of the day's top artists: Mark
Rothko, Helen Frankenthaler, and critic Clement Greenberg. Also, in their address book, Pollock's psychologist and homeopathic doctor. (Savig says she didn't try any of the phone
numbers.) Address books get messier and messier over the years as numbers and addresses change. The little leather-covered books get splotched, frayed and dog-eared. New York art dealer
Holly Solomon owned a hulking Rolodex jammed with more than 2,000 cards filled with the names of artists she represented: Laurie Anderson, Nam June Paik, William Wegman. Mid-century textile
designer Dorothy Liebes arranged her contacts like the Yellow Pages: restaurants, airlines, masseuses, boys and a mysterious category called "extra girls" — perhaps for dinner
parties? You can see the show for yourself — and speculate about the jottings of some of America's most famous artists — until Nov. 1. Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit
https://www.npr.org.