A few nice photo galleries images I found:
Boston - Back Bay: Boston Public Library McKim Building - Wiggin Gallery Dioramas - Honore Daumier
Image by wallyg
Artist Honore Daumier looks down from an upper window in this diorama. A number of the characters who appear in his lithographs come to life again in the Paris street he watches, the melon sniffers at left, the stout, indignant woman who observes them, the man carrying a painting., the problem child who drove his father, a poet, to desperation by beating on his dream, the loiterer who gazes into a shop window at food he does not have money to buy.
Located in a dark corner in the Wiggins Gallery, twelve dioramas created by Louis Stimson in the 1940's depict artists in the midst of painting some of their most famous works. The Albert H. Wiggin Gallery, originally devoted to special collections, was given over to the exhibiting of prints in 1941 when Mr. Wiggin, a Boston born New York financier, gave the Library his collection of prints and drawings.
The Boston Public Library McKim Building, located on Boylston Street between Dartmouth and Exeter Streets, was built in 1895 by Charles Follen McKim of McKim, Mead & White. Consisting of a three-story, monumental free-standing block in the style of an Italian Renaissance palace surrounding an open courtyard, McKim's design was one of the earliest successful examples of Renaissance Beaux-Arts Classicism in America, and set the precedent for grand scale urban libraries. In 1972, the Philip Johnson-designed late modernist wing was added to the Central Library location. The Boston Public Library system, established in 1848, was the country's first publicly supported municipal library, its first large library open to the public and its first to allow citizens to borrow books. There are currently twenty-six branches in the system.