dessins
AP178.S1.1995.PR12.006.2
Description:
Original file title: Hombroich Clemente 09-09-2011
2001-2011
Plans, sketches, photographs, and correspondence for the Museum Insel Hombroich, Instituto de Biofísica, Hombroich (folder 2 of 2)
Actions:
AP178.S1.1995.PR12.006.2
Description:
Original file title: Hombroich Clemente 09-09-2011
dessins
2001-2011
documents textuels
PHCON2002:0016:004:090:001
Description:
Accompanying the press release are the 12 convention resolutions adopted by artists who men in convention at the Georgia Museum of Art in Athens on 7 January 1977.
20 January 1977
Press release from the Georgia Museum of Art relating to the convention and collection titled "Open to New Ideas: A Collection of New Art for Jimmy Carter"
Actions:
PHCON2002:0016:004:090:001
Description:
Accompanying the press release are the 12 convention resolutions adopted by artists who men in convention at the Georgia Museum of Art in Athens on 7 January 1977.
documents textuels
20 January 1977
documents textuels
AP075.S1.2004.PR02.013
Description:
Includes some drawings related to the 1997 restoration of grounds for the Museum.
2008
Contractor submission and correspondence related to site utilities and events sites, Museum of Anthropology Renewal, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia
Actions:
AP075.S1.2004.PR02.013
Description:
Includes some drawings related to the 1997 restoration of grounds for the Museum.
documents textuels
2008
Projet
AP178.S1.1998.PR07
Description:
This project series documents the C. Cultural e Audit. para a Fundação Ibere Camargo in Porto Alegre, Brazil. While the records were held in the office’s archives this project was assigned the number 102/90. The office assigned the date 1998 to this project. At the end of the nineties, an architectural competition was held for the construction of a new building for the Iberê Camargo Foundation. The foundation holds the archives and work of the Brazilian painter Ibere Carmargo, as well as hosts temporary exhibitions and seminars. The project site is located near the Guaíba River, between a cliff and the Avenida Padre Cacique. Collaborators on the project were Barbara Rangel, Pedro Polonia, Michele Gigante, Francesca Montalto, Atsushi Ueno, Rita Amaral, José Luiz Cana, and Camargo Correa. The three-stories building is 88,000 square feet and includes nine galleries, storage spaces, offices, a bookstore, an auditorium, and a video library. Each of the galleries is independent but linked via a system of ramps. One of the unique qualities of the building are the ramps that come out of its concrete façade. Due to the limited space, the parking was built below the Avenida Padre Cacique. The building respects the concept of sustainable development, with a sewage treatment station that redistributes the water to the surrounding vegetation. The museum was Siza's first built project in Brazil and it was inaugurated in 2008. Siza received the Golden Lion award at the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2003 for this project. Documenting this project are sketches, studies, preliminary drawings, working drawings, technical drawings, and electrical drawings. Textual material includes project documentation, correspondence, and documentation regarding exhibitions about the building. Photographic material documents the models, project site, and built project.
1998-2006
C. Cultural e Audit. para a Fundação Iberê Camargo [Iberê Camargo Foundation Museum], Porto Alegre, Brazil (1998)
Actions:
AP178.S1.1998.PR07
Description:
This project series documents the C. Cultural e Audit. para a Fundação Ibere Camargo in Porto Alegre, Brazil. While the records were held in the office’s archives this project was assigned the number 102/90. The office assigned the date 1998 to this project. At the end of the nineties, an architectural competition was held for the construction of a new building for the Iberê Camargo Foundation. The foundation holds the archives and work of the Brazilian painter Ibere Carmargo, as well as hosts temporary exhibitions and seminars. The project site is located near the Guaíba River, between a cliff and the Avenida Padre Cacique. Collaborators on the project were Barbara Rangel, Pedro Polonia, Michele Gigante, Francesca Montalto, Atsushi Ueno, Rita Amaral, José Luiz Cana, and Camargo Correa. The three-stories building is 88,000 square feet and includes nine galleries, storage spaces, offices, a bookstore, an auditorium, and a video library. Each of the galleries is independent but linked via a system of ramps. One of the unique qualities of the building are the ramps that come out of its concrete façade. Due to the limited space, the parking was built below the Avenida Padre Cacique. The building respects the concept of sustainable development, with a sewage treatment station that redistributes the water to the surrounding vegetation. The museum was Siza's first built project in Brazil and it was inaugurated in 2008. Siza received the Golden Lion award at the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2003 for this project. Documenting this project are sketches, studies, preliminary drawings, working drawings, technical drawings, and electrical drawings. Textual material includes project documentation, correspondence, and documentation regarding exhibitions about the building. Photographic material documents the models, project site, and built project.
Project
1998-2006
DR1994:0015:003
October 1975
DR1994:0015:004
October 1975
PH1982:0700
architecture, peinture, topographique
between 1895 and 1940
architecture, peinture, topographique
ARCH280744
between 1992 and 1997
photographies
PH2000:0057
architecture
1999
photographies
1999
architecture
photographies
Quantité:
16 photograph(s)
PH1979:0117:001-016
ca. 1860s
Photographs of Oxford and vicinity, including the New Museum, N. Avon, Magdalene, High St., Saint Marys, Oxford, England
Actions:
PH1979:0117:001-016
photographies
Quantité:
16 photograph(s)
ca. 1860s