PH1987:1172
ca. 1930
PH1987:1169
ca. 1930
PH1987:1173
Description:
- Zachwatowicz and Bieganski reproduce elevations for a number of buildings along Swietojanska Street, including the Jesuit Church and the Basilica of St. John the Baptist, showing the appearance of the buildings before and after World War II, and after their reconstruction in the early 1950s. Chroscicki and Rottermund provide an illustrated account of the square.
ca. 1930
Bird's eye-view of the column of King Sigismund III and buildings on the west side of Zamkowy Square, including a partial view of the gable-roofed Jesuit Church and the Basilica of the Decapitation of St. John the Baptist in the background, Warsaw, Poland
Actions:
PH1987:1173
Description:
- Zachwatowicz and Bieganski reproduce elevations for a number of buildings along Swietojanska Street, including the Jesuit Church and the Basilica of St. John the Baptist, showing the appearance of the buildings before and after World War II, and after their reconstruction in the early 1950s. Chroscicki and Rottermund provide an illustrated account of the square.
documents textuels
ARCH268187
Description:
Polish translation of the text published in Warsaw in 1965 in Kultura, no. 38-119, 19 September 1965.
after 19 September 1965
Text concerning Architect Helena Syrkus’s memories of Le Corbusier
Actions:
ARCH268187
Description:
Polish translation of the text published in Warsaw in 1965 in Kultura, no. 38-119, 19 September 1965.
documents textuels
after 19 September 1965
Série(s)
AP163.S3
Description:
This subseries documents the work of architect Maria Prus, Victor Prus's spouse. Born Maria Fisz, she studies at Warsaw University. Her studies are interrupted by the war, and she completes them in Belgium before emigrating to England where she worked at the London County Council, Architect Department, Housing Division. She maries architect Victor Prus in 1948 and emigrates with him in Canada in 1953. As a landscape architect, Maria Prus works with her husband on most of his projects. This sub-series contains documents related to work as a student and her professional work, throught 7 projects, which includes mainly drawings.
Maria Prus’s student and professional work in England
Actions:
AP163.S3
Description:
This subseries documents the work of architect Maria Prus, Victor Prus's spouse. Born Maria Fisz, she studies at Warsaw University. Her studies are interrupted by the war, and she completes them in Belgium before emigrating to England where she worked at the London County Council, Architect Department, Housing Division. She maries architect Victor Prus in 1948 and emigrates with him in Canada in 1953. As a landscape architect, Maria Prus works with her husband on most of his projects. This sub-series contains documents related to work as a student and her professional work, throught 7 projects, which includes mainly drawings.
Series 3
archives
Niveau de description archivistique:
Fonds
Fonds Zdzislaw Przygoda
AP126
Résumé:
Le Fonds Zdzislaw Przygoda (Sir Casimir Gzowski Memorial) est composé de deux dessins, d'une photographie et de documents textuels, principalement de la correspondance, relatifs au projet de construire un monument commémoratif à Toronto à la mémoire de l'ingénieur polonais Sir Casimir Gzowski (1813-1898). Les documents produits et colligés par Zdzislaw Przygoda, vice-président exécutif du Sir Casimir Gzowski Memorial Centennial Committee, nous renseignent sur l'évolution du projet.
1963-1967
Fonds Zdzislaw Przygoda
Actions:
AP126
Résumé:
Le Fonds Zdzislaw Przygoda (Sir Casimir Gzowski Memorial) est composé de deux dessins, d'une photographie et de documents textuels, principalement de la correspondance, relatifs au projet de construire un monument commémoratif à Toronto à la mémoire de l'ingénieur polonais Sir Casimir Gzowski (1813-1898). Les documents produits et colligés par Zdzislaw Przygoda, vice-président exécutif du Sir Casimir Gzowski Memorial Centennial Committee, nous renseignent sur l'évolution du projet.
archives
Niveau de description archivistique:
Fonds
1963-1967
archives
Niveau de description archivistique:
Fonds
Joseph Rykwert fonds
AP209
Résumé:
The Joseph Rykwert fonds, 1928-2022, documents Joseph Rykwert’s career as an architectural historian, author and professor. The fonds includes the records for over a dozen monographs written between the mid-1960s and the mid-2010s as well as edited works and articles, and details his teaching and lecturing activities from the 1960s onwards in universities in Europe and the United States. The records highlight Joseph Rykwert’s multidisciplinary approach, which involved archaeology, anthropology and psychoanalysis in his study of the history and theory of architecture and of the urban form. The fonds is composed of textual records, publications and ephemera, and of photographs including multiple albums and a large number of slides; the fonds also documents Joseph Rykwert’s career as an independent designer through drawings realized between the late 1940s and the late 1970s.
1928-2022
Joseph Rykwert fonds
Actions:
AP209
Résumé:
The Joseph Rykwert fonds, 1928-2022, documents Joseph Rykwert’s career as an architectural historian, author and professor. The fonds includes the records for over a dozen monographs written between the mid-1960s and the mid-2010s as well as edited works and articles, and details his teaching and lecturing activities from the 1960s onwards in universities in Europe and the United States. The records highlight Joseph Rykwert’s multidisciplinary approach, which involved archaeology, anthropology and psychoanalysis in his study of the history and theory of architecture and of the urban form. The fonds is composed of textual records, publications and ephemera, and of photographs including multiple albums and a large number of slides; the fonds also documents Joseph Rykwert’s career as an independent designer through drawings realized between the late 1940s and the late 1970s.
archives
Niveau de description archivistique:
Fonds
1928-2022
articles
Alina
Aglaia Konrad, Alina Scholtz, Barbara Brukalska, Halina Skibniewska, Helena Syrkus, Zofia Hansen, Jelena Pančevac, Pancevac, Varsovie, paysage, NORM, CCA Singles, Zaven Titizian
4 novembre 2024
archives
Niveau de description archivistique:
Fonds
Fonds Victor Prus
AP163
Résumé:
The Victor Prus fonds documents the professional practice of architect Victor Prus from student and professional work in England to architectural projects in Canada. The majority of the documents in the fonds consist of drawings and textual records relating to over 90 projects, such as Centre Rockland (1960), the Expo 67 Stadium (1967), the Grand Théâtre de Québec (1971) and the Palais des Congrès de Montréal (1983).
1945-1992
Fonds Victor Prus
Actions:
AP163
Résumé:
The Victor Prus fonds documents the professional practice of architect Victor Prus from student and professional work in England to architectural projects in Canada. The majority of the documents in the fonds consist of drawings and textual records relating to over 90 projects, such as Centre Rockland (1960), the Expo 67 Stadium (1967), the Grand Théâtre de Québec (1971) and the Palais des Congrès de Montréal (1983).
archives
Niveau de description archivistique:
Fonds
1945-1992
DR2007:0018:003
Description:
Page bound essay, "The Positive and Negative Influences of Electronic Systems on Architecture", 8 1/2" x 14", April 1983; summary presented at international conference in Warsaw, Poland, spring 1983; essay published as "Enjoying Electronic Mannerisms" in the journal CRIT, Fall 1984, pp. 14-18, as part of a special issue on "The Next Architecture" by Aaron Betsky; essay also published as "Sony Walkman-Adorned Teleriders Moving Through Cable Networks of Computerized Cottage Land, Under the Skies of Overcrowded Orbital Slots: Enjoying Electronic Mannerisms", The Fifth Column, Vo. 5, winter 1984 (Montreal); and parts of this project were discussed by Christopher Hume in The Toronto Star, January 19, 1985. Also, five original collage and colour pencil drawings on illustration board, each 8 1/2" x 14" that were the source of illustrations for the bound essay and the subsequent publications.
1983
Untitled work for the essay "The Positive and Negative Influences of Electronic Systems on Architecture"
Actions:
DR2007:0018:003
Description:
Page bound essay, "The Positive and Negative Influences of Electronic Systems on Architecture", 8 1/2" x 14", April 1983; summary presented at international conference in Warsaw, Poland, spring 1983; essay published as "Enjoying Electronic Mannerisms" in the journal CRIT, Fall 1984, pp. 14-18, as part of a special issue on "The Next Architecture" by Aaron Betsky; essay also published as "Sony Walkman-Adorned Teleriders Moving Through Cable Networks of Computerized Cottage Land, Under the Skies of Overcrowded Orbital Slots: Enjoying Electronic Mannerisms", The Fifth Column, Vo. 5, winter 1984 (Montreal); and parts of this project were discussed by Christopher Hume in The Toronto Star, January 19, 1985. Also, five original collage and colour pencil drawings on illustration board, each 8 1/2" x 14" that were the source of illustrations for the bound essay and the subsequent publications.