textual records
AP197.S1.SS2.006
2000
textual records
2000
drawings
Quantity:
16 File
drawings
Quantity:
16 File
Project
AP142.S1.D276
Description:
File documents an unexecuted project for an airport terminal in Kaliningrad, Russia. Material in this file was probably produced in 1996. File contains drawings.
[1996]
Kaliningrad International Air-Terminal
Actions:
AP142.S1.D276
Description:
File documents an unexecuted project for an airport terminal in Kaliningrad, Russia. Material in this file was probably produced in 1996. File contains drawings.
File 276
[1996]
photographs
PH1983:0042.05:001-033
Description:
Includes views of the pavilions of Russia, "Asie Russe", China, and Japan.
ca. 1900
1900, Pavillons Etrangers Trocadéro. I, 6
Actions:
PH1983:0042.05:001-033
Description:
Includes views of the pavilions of Russia, "Asie Russe", China, and Japan.
photographs
ca. 1900
articles
Journeys and translation
Project
AP142.S1.D117
Description:
File documents an unexecuted (?) project for a factory of medical equipment in Syzran, Soviet Union (now Russia). Material in this file was produced in 1988. File contains design development drawings. File also contain textual records, including sketches, drawings, correspondence, architect's statements, specifications, calculations, a business card, a schedule, a set of transfer type, and notes.
1988
Fabbrica attrezature ospedaliere a Sysran, URSS
Actions:
AP142.S1.D117
Description:
File documents an unexecuted (?) project for a factory of medical equipment in Syzran, Soviet Union (now Russia). Material in this file was produced in 1988. File contains design development drawings. File also contain textual records, including sketches, drawings, correspondence, architect's statements, specifications, calculations, a business card, a schedule, a set of transfer type, and notes.
File 117
1988
Sub-series
Current Events Files
AP032.S6.D1
Description:
A collection of current events and personal interest files concerning U.S. politics, civil rights, Jewish groups, Chernobyl Russia, Israel, Poland, Feminism and the Gulf War. Also numerous files marked "unsorted" which contain articles on the above topics as well as architecture and engineering, and also include some correspondence, notes, memos and postcards. Most of the material consists of newspaper and periodical clippings.
1986-1990
Current Events Files
Actions:
AP032.S6.D1
Description:
A collection of current events and personal interest files concerning U.S. politics, civil rights, Jewish groups, Chernobyl Russia, Israel, Poland, Feminism and the Gulf War. Also numerous files marked "unsorted" which contain articles on the above topics as well as architecture and engineering, and also include some correspondence, notes, memos and postcards. Most of the material consists of newspaper and periodical clippings.
File 1
1986-1990
photographs
AP197.S2.046
Description:
This box consists of photographic materials that illustrate various architectural drawings and models as well as buildings and landscapes around the world, as seen in New York City, China, Peru, Greece, India, Russia, and more.
circa 1960-2010
Photographs of buildings, drawings and architectural models
Actions:
AP197.S2.046
Description:
This box consists of photographic materials that illustrate various architectural drawings and models as well as buildings and landscapes around the world, as seen in New York City, China, Peru, Greece, India, Russia, and more.
photographs
circa 1960-2010
textual records
AP197.S2.004
Description:
The box is comprised of writings on modern architecture, divided by country and organized alphabetically. The sections are divided as follows: General; Austria; Australia; Belgium; Canada; China; Czechoslovakia; Dutch; England; French; Finland; France; German; Greek; Islam; Italian; Japan; Mexico; Russia; Scandanavian; and Spain.
1965-1996
Research files on modern architecture, organized by geographic location (A-S)
Actions:
AP197.S2.004
Description:
The box is comprised of writings on modern architecture, divided by country and organized alphabetically. The sections are divided as follows: General; Austria; Australia; Belgium; Canada; China; Czechoslovakia; Dutch; England; French; Finland; France; German; Greek; Islam; Italian; Japan; Mexico; Russia; Scandanavian; and Spain.
textual records
1965-1996
Series
Bruno Taut
AP162.S8
Description:
Series documents the contribution of architect Bruno Taut to the correspondence circle of Die gläserne Kette. Bruno Taut participated under the pseudonym Glas. Born in 1880 in Königsberg, Germany, Bruno Taut studied architecture at the Bauwerkschule in Königsberg. After working in architectural firms from 1903 to 1909, he worked in partnership with Franz Hoffman and later with his brother Max Taut. Bruno Taut undertook various architectural projects including housing projects, public commissions, and later projects for universities and schools. In 1918, he founded the Arbeisrat für Kunst, a union of architects, painters, writers and other artists based in Berlin and dedicated to bring architectural and artisit tendencies of the time to a broader public. This union also involved some members of the Die gläserne Kette circle. Between 1920 and 1921, Bruno Taut was editor to the magazine "Frühlich". He taught architecture at the Technische Hochschule at Berlin-Charlottenburg from 1930 to 1932, and undertook a working visit in Russia in 1932 to 1933. After spending time in Japan between 1933 and 1936 due to enforced emigration, he taught at the Academy of Arts in Istanbul. He died in Istanbul in 1938. (Source: Ian Boyd Whyte, Bruno Taut and the Architecture of Activism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982) This series comprises part of Bruno Taut's correspondence to the Die gläserne Kette circle, along with related drawings and documents. The series also includes photographic materials of some of his architectural projects.
between 1919 and 1920
Bruno Taut
Actions:
AP162.S8
Description:
Series documents the contribution of architect Bruno Taut to the correspondence circle of Die gläserne Kette. Bruno Taut participated under the pseudonym Glas. Born in 1880 in Königsberg, Germany, Bruno Taut studied architecture at the Bauwerkschule in Königsberg. After working in architectural firms from 1903 to 1909, he worked in partnership with Franz Hoffman and later with his brother Max Taut. Bruno Taut undertook various architectural projects including housing projects, public commissions, and later projects for universities and schools. In 1918, he founded the Arbeisrat für Kunst, a union of architects, painters, writers and other artists based in Berlin and dedicated to bring architectural and artisit tendencies of the time to a broader public. This union also involved some members of the Die gläserne Kette circle. Between 1920 and 1921, Bruno Taut was editor to the magazine "Frühlich". He taught architecture at the Technische Hochschule at Berlin-Charlottenburg from 1930 to 1932, and undertook a working visit in Russia in 1932 to 1933. After spending time in Japan between 1933 and 1936 due to enforced emigration, he taught at the Academy of Arts in Istanbul. He died in Istanbul in 1938. (Source: Ian Boyd Whyte, Bruno Taut and the Architecture of Activism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982) This series comprises part of Bruno Taut's correspondence to the Die gläserne Kette circle, along with related drawings and documents. The series also includes photographic materials of some of his architectural projects.
series
between 1919 and 1920