PH1983:0213
Description:
- There is a radiator for the heating system within the pier cluster and bookshelf between the living room and library.
architecture, interior design
after 1905
Darwin D. Martin House, living room, pier cluster
Actions:
PH1983:0213
Description:
- There is a radiator for the heating system within the pier cluster and bookshelf between the living room and library.
architecture, interior design
DR1984:0008
Description:
- Drawing DR1984:0008 for C.L.J. van Lent shop and house, Heemstede, shows room sizes and layout that differ from later blueprints DR1984:0476 - DR1984:0478.
architecture
1913
Ground and first floor plans and principal elevation for a motorcycle shop and house for C.L.J. van Lent, Heemstede, Netherlands
Actions:
DR1984:0008
Description:
- Drawing DR1984:0008 for C.L.J. van Lent shop and house, Heemstede, shows room sizes and layout that differ from later blueprints DR1984:0476 - DR1984:0478.
architecture
Project
CI005.S1.1931.PR1
Description:
Oud's international reputation was cemented due in part to his work on the Weissenhofsiedlung, in Stuttgart, as well as to the praise of contemporary American art historian, Henry-Russell Hitchcock. Oud was commissioned in 1931 to design a private home for the mother of Oud's American friend, Philip Johnson, although the project was never realized due to the client's financial struggles in the economic Depression. Oud submitted drawings and a model of the design for Mrs H.H. Johnson's home to the Museum of Modern Art's 1932 "Modern Architecture – International Exhibition." Although Oud was generally praised for his exhibition entries, especially photographs of Hoek van Holland, he received little positive attention with his model submission of the House of Mrs H.H. Johnson. Oud began design for the house late in 1931 and designed a large villa with an open, spacious living room and dining room, strategic garden views, and a detached sunroom with a retractable roof (Taverne et al. 2001, 320). Project series includes photographs of the model of House for Mrs H.H. Johnson, as well as drawings of plans for the house.
1931
House for Mrs H. H. Johnson, Pinehurst, North Carolina (1931)
Actions:
CI005.S1.1931.PR1
Description:
Oud's international reputation was cemented due in part to his work on the Weissenhofsiedlung, in Stuttgart, as well as to the praise of contemporary American art historian, Henry-Russell Hitchcock. Oud was commissioned in 1931 to design a private home for the mother of Oud's American friend, Philip Johnson, although the project was never realized due to the client's financial struggles in the economic Depression. Oud submitted drawings and a model of the design for Mrs H.H. Johnson's home to the Museum of Modern Art's 1932 "Modern Architecture – International Exhibition." Although Oud was generally praised for his exhibition entries, especially photographs of Hoek van Holland, he received little positive attention with his model submission of the House of Mrs H.H. Johnson. Oud began design for the house late in 1931 and designed a large villa with an open, spacious living room and dining room, strategic garden views, and a detached sunroom with a retractable roof (Taverne et al. 2001, 320). Project series includes photographs of the model of House for Mrs H.H. Johnson, as well as drawings of plans for the house.
project
1931
DR1974:0002:002:031
architecture
printed after 26 May 1852
architecture
photographs
AP173.S2.2000.D1.002
Description:
Group consists of 104 slides of design development drawings and working drawings, predominantly 3D renderings from digital files, photographs of study models. Stored in a binder with the orginial divider entitled "SON-O-HOUSE".
ca. 2000
Photographs of the Son-O-House in Son en Breugel, Netherlands
Actions:
AP173.S2.2000.D1.002
Description:
Group consists of 104 slides of design development drawings and working drawings, predominantly 3D renderings from digital files, photographs of study models. Stored in a binder with the orginial divider entitled "SON-O-HOUSE".
photographs
ca. 2000
Project
AP178.S1.1981.PR01
Description:
This project series documents the Casa Fernando Machado in Porto, Portugal. While the records were held in the office’s archives this project was assigned the number 9/80. The office assigned the date 1981 to this project. The project files document the design of a three-storey house. The project was not built. Documenting this project are sketches, studies and design development drawings. Textual materials include correspondence.
1981-1989
Casa Fernando Machado [Fernando Machado house], Porto, Portugal (1981)
Actions:
AP178.S1.1981.PR01
Description:
This project series documents the Casa Fernando Machado in Porto, Portugal. While the records were held in the office’s archives this project was assigned the number 9/80. The office assigned the date 1981 to this project. The project files document the design of a three-storey house. The project was not built. Documenting this project are sketches, studies and design development drawings. Textual materials include correspondence.
Project
1981-1989
drawings
DR1984:0733
architecture
1907
drawings
1907
architecture
photographs
PH1983:0516:029
ca. 1869
View of tea house on the Tokaido road, showing a group of people standing on a bridge over river, near Nagasaki, Japan
Actions:
PH1983:0516:029
photographs
ca. 1869
drawings
DR1988:0433:041
Description:
- One of a group of working drawings for William Burn's October 1849 project for Fonthill House, Wiltshire, a country house designed in the Jacobethan style. This group represents only one of the projects that Burn proposed for Fonthill House; the final project, executed in 1856, was much smaller (Walker, 31, illustrated in Hitchcock, vol. 2, fig. VIII 31). Drawings include plans, elevations, and sections, as well as full-scale drawings of masonry details. Approximately half of the drawings are part of a numbered series from one to twenty-two, while the other drawings, mostly masonry details, were not numbered. These latter drawings are not as carefully finished, and a few are incomplete.
architecture
October 1849
Profiles and an elevation for details of the stone work for Fonthill House
Actions:
DR1988:0433:041
Description:
- One of a group of working drawings for William Burn's October 1849 project for Fonthill House, Wiltshire, a country house designed in the Jacobethan style. This group represents only one of the projects that Burn proposed for Fonthill House; the final project, executed in 1856, was much smaller (Walker, 31, illustrated in Hitchcock, vol. 2, fig. VIII 31). Drawings include plans, elevations, and sections, as well as full-scale drawings of masonry details. Approximately half of the drawings are part of a numbered series from one to twenty-two, while the other drawings, mostly masonry details, were not numbered. These latter drawings are not as carefully finished, and a few are incomplete.
drawings
October 1849
architecture
drawings
DR1988:0433:045
Description:
- One of a group of working drawings for William Burn's October 1849 project for Fonthill House, Wiltshire, a country house designed in the Jacobethan style. This group represents only one of the projects that Burn proposed for Fonthill House; the final project, executed in 1856, was much smaller (Walker, 31, illustrated in Hitchcock, vol. 2, fig. VIII 31). Drawings include plans, elevations, and sections, as well as full-scale drawings of masonry details. Approximately half of the drawings are part of a numbered series from one to twenty-two, while the other drawings, mostly masonry details, were not numbered. These latter drawings are not as carefully finished, and a few are incomplete.
architecture
October 1849
Sections and elevations for the cornice of the great tower for Fonthill House
Actions:
DR1988:0433:045
Description:
- One of a group of working drawings for William Burn's October 1849 project for Fonthill House, Wiltshire, a country house designed in the Jacobethan style. This group represents only one of the projects that Burn proposed for Fonthill House; the final project, executed in 1856, was much smaller (Walker, 31, illustrated in Hitchcock, vol. 2, fig. VIII 31). Drawings include plans, elevations, and sections, as well as full-scale drawings of masonry details. Approximately half of the drawings are part of a numbered series from one to twenty-two, while the other drawings, mostly masonry details, were not numbered. These latter drawings are not as carefully finished, and a few are incomplete.
drawings
October 1849
architecture