PHCON2002:0016:010
Description:
Binder documents exhibitions from 2001 to 2002 that included the work of Gordon Matta-Clark, along with exhibition reviews, photographs, slides, and articles. Also included is documentation about his contemporaries including an obituary of his art dealer, Holly Solomon. Binder contains slides and textual records.
2001-2002
Reviews, Announcements, Catalogues 2001-2002
Actions:
PHCON2002:0016:010
Description:
Binder documents exhibitions from 2001 to 2002 that included the work of Gordon Matta-Clark, along with exhibition reviews, photographs, slides, and articles. Also included is documentation about his contemporaries including an obituary of his art dealer, Holly Solomon. Binder contains slides and textual records.
2001-2002
dessins, documents textuels
DR2006:0151
Description:
Miscellaneous (1982-2001) (correspondence, drawings, notes, City of the Future, Inter-Action, 175 Obeliq, Stratton, Steel House)
1982-2001
Miscellaneous (1982-2001) (correspondence, drawings
Actions:
DR2006:0151
Description:
Miscellaneous (1982-2001) (correspondence, drawings, notes, City of the Future, Inter-Action, 175 Obeliq, Stratton, Steel House)
dessins, documents textuels
1982-2001
documents textuels
AP075.S3.SS2.150
Description:
This box contains professional correspondence, organized in chronological order, from 1994-2001. This correspondence contains chiefly letters related to participation to exhibitions and publishing in landscape architecture publications, correspondence related to nominations and awards received by Oberlander, requests to serve on juries, correspondence with schools of architecture and landscape architects associations, about membership or attendance to events. It also comprises correspondence related to research and involvement in sustainable development. It also contains correspondence with city planning committees or other governmental institutions related to projects or consultation in landscape design, and letters of reference or received job applications. This box also includes correspondence related to Oberlander's trip to Australia This correspondence also comprises a few letters related to Oberlander's projects, mainly letters of congratulations or comments for her design.
1994-2001
Professional correspondence from 1994-2001
Actions:
AP075.S3.SS2.150
Description:
This box contains professional correspondence, organized in chronological order, from 1994-2001. This correspondence contains chiefly letters related to participation to exhibitions and publishing in landscape architecture publications, correspondence related to nominations and awards received by Oberlander, requests to serve on juries, correspondence with schools of architecture and landscape architects associations, about membership or attendance to events. It also comprises correspondence related to research and involvement in sustainable development. It also contains correspondence with city planning committees or other governmental institutions related to projects or consultation in landscape design, and letters of reference or received job applications. This box also includes correspondence related to Oberlander's trip to Australia This correspondence also comprises a few letters related to Oberlander's projects, mainly letters of congratulations or comments for her design.
documents textuels
1994-2001
Projet
Loewe, Madrid, Spain (2001)
AP164.S1.2001.D5
Description:
The project series documents a competition entry for the facade for the store Loewe, in Madrid, Spain. The firm identified this project as number 140. Documenting the project are presentation drawings, textual records, and photographic and digital materials.
1953, 1956, 2000-2001
Loewe, Madrid, Spain (2001)
Actions:
AP164.S1.2001.D5
Description:
The project series documents a competition entry for the facade for the store Loewe, in Madrid, Spain. The firm identified this project as number 140. Documenting the project are presentation drawings, textual records, and photographic and digital materials.
Project
1953, 1956, 2000-2001
Projet
Carbon Tower (2001)
AP174.S1.2001.D1
Description:
This project file documents an unbuilt design by Testa & Weiser for Carbon Tower (2001), a forty-storey building made almost entirely of carbon fibre. The project was developed in parallel with scripting software designed while Peter Testa and Devyn Weiser co-directed the Emergent Design Group at MIT. "The tower consists of an interdependent set of parts: floor plates hang from a diagrid structure of bundled fibres reinforced by two double-helix covered ramps, which are run in and out of the structure and are themselves made of strands woven at a finer scale. A thin composite skin—glass would be too heavy—wraps the tower’s parts together. A collaboration with Arup in 2002 allowed Testa & Weiser to simplify the scheme even further, by moving all core elements, from elevators to structural supports, to the tower’s perimeter. To take full advantage of the flexibility and energy efficiency of composite materials, Testa & Weiser also imagined that the carbon fibre structures would be formed on site through a process called pultrusion."[1] The file contains a large number of digital files documenting the conceptual and design development of the project; consultation with Arup Consulting Engineers, New York; research on composite materials; fabrication of 3D printed physical models by 3D Systems and Windform; and exhibition of the project at several museums and galleries, including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Cooper-Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum, New York. Also contained in the file are 56 paper drawings (including some sketches done on top of printed computer-aided designs) and two 3D printed physical models produced by 3D Systems. Sources: [1] Canadian Centre for Architecture. Archaeology of the Digital 12: Testa & Weiser, Carbon Tower, ed. Greg Lynn (2015), ISBN 978-1-927071-25-0.
2002-2014
Carbon Tower (2001)
Actions:
AP174.S1.2001.D1
Description:
This project file documents an unbuilt design by Testa & Weiser for Carbon Tower (2001), a forty-storey building made almost entirely of carbon fibre. The project was developed in parallel with scripting software designed while Peter Testa and Devyn Weiser co-directed the Emergent Design Group at MIT. "The tower consists of an interdependent set of parts: floor plates hang from a diagrid structure of bundled fibres reinforced by two double-helix covered ramps, which are run in and out of the structure and are themselves made of strands woven at a finer scale. A thin composite skin—glass would be too heavy—wraps the tower’s parts together. A collaboration with Arup in 2002 allowed Testa & Weiser to simplify the scheme even further, by moving all core elements, from elevators to structural supports, to the tower’s perimeter. To take full advantage of the flexibility and energy efficiency of composite materials, Testa & Weiser also imagined that the carbon fibre structures would be formed on site through a process called pultrusion."[1] The file contains a large number of digital files documenting the conceptual and design development of the project; consultation with Arup Consulting Engineers, New York; research on composite materials; fabrication of 3D printed physical models by 3D Systems and Windform; and exhibition of the project at several museums and galleries, including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Cooper-Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum, New York. Also contained in the file are 56 paper drawings (including some sketches done on top of printed computer-aided designs) and two 3D printed physical models produced by 3D Systems. Sources: [1] Canadian Centre for Architecture. Archaeology of the Digital 12: Testa & Weiser, Carbon Tower, ed. Greg Lynn (2015), ISBN 978-1-927071-25-0.
Project
2002-2014
Projet
AP173.S1.2001.D4
Description:
Series documents Lars Spuybroek's project ObliqueWTC in New York, United States, a proposal for the new World Trade Center for the Max Protetch Gallery in New York. Material in this series was produced around 2001. The series contains slides of drawings and a presentation drawing. This project may also include digital design material, which has yet to be processed and which will available for consultation in 2017.
ca. 2001
ObliqueWTC, New York City, United States (2001)
Actions:
AP173.S1.2001.D4
Description:
Series documents Lars Spuybroek's project ObliqueWTC in New York, United States, a proposal for the new World Trade Center for the Max Protetch Gallery in New York. Material in this series was produced around 2001. The series contains slides of drawings and a presentation drawing. This project may also include digital design material, which has yet to be processed and which will available for consultation in 2017.
Project
ca. 2001
documents textuels
AP207.S5.024
Description:
Contains press clippings on Gianni Pettena and his projects, correspondence, and promotional material of events related to Pettena's work and Pettena's interests. First binder of two.
2001-2002
Binder of professional papers, 2001-2002
Actions:
AP207.S5.024
Description:
Contains press clippings on Gianni Pettena and his projects, correspondence, and promotional material of events related to Pettena's work and Pettena's interests. First binder of two.
documents textuels
2001-2002
documents textuels
AP207.S5.025
Description:
Contains press clippings on Gianni Pettena and his projects, correspondence, and promotional material of events related to Pettena's work and Pettena's interests. Second binder of two.
2001-2002
Binder of professional papers, 2001-2002
Actions:
AP207.S5.025
Description:
Contains press clippings on Gianni Pettena and his projects, correspondence, and promotional material of events related to Pettena's work and Pettena's interests. Second binder of two.
documents textuels
2001-2002
Série(s)
AP179.S1
Description:
Series 1, Casa La Roca, Caracas, Venezuela, 1995 – 2001, documents the development of a project (unrealized) for a residential home situated among the hills at the southern edge of Caracas. The majority of records were produced between 1995 and 1997. The series consists of sketches, drawings and reprographic copies for the conceptual and design development phases of the project, a wood model and model pieces, photographs of the site, and textual records including correspondence and zoning records. The series also contains an oversized banner printed with an image of the model that was featured in the Fabrications exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1998, as well as plans for the show. The digital material in this series consists of an animated rendering of the brick patio wall and photographs of the physical drawings and the model for Casa La Roca. The name of the project, Casa la Roca (in English, “the rock house”), is derived from a large mass of rock that occupies the back of the property. The design utilizes the presence of the rock, in combination with sliding glass doors and windows, to create an “outdoor room” that functions both as a living space and back yard. The design also incorporates the nature of the site through the use of materials such as terracotta block, brick, and tile.
1995 - 2001
Casa La Roca, Caracas, Venezuela (1995 - 2001)
Actions:
AP179.S1
Description:
Series 1, Casa La Roca, Caracas, Venezuela, 1995 – 2001, documents the development of a project (unrealized) for a residential home situated among the hills at the southern edge of Caracas. The majority of records were produced between 1995 and 1997. The series consists of sketches, drawings and reprographic copies for the conceptual and design development phases of the project, a wood model and model pieces, photographs of the site, and textual records including correspondence and zoning records. The series also contains an oversized banner printed with an image of the model that was featured in the Fabrications exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1998, as well as plans for the show. The digital material in this series consists of an animated rendering of the brick patio wall and photographs of the physical drawings and the model for Casa La Roca. The name of the project, Casa la Roca (in English, “the rock house”), is derived from a large mass of rock that occupies the back of the property. The design utilizes the presence of the rock, in combination with sliding glass doors and windows, to create an “outdoor room” that functions both as a living space and back yard. The design also incorporates the nature of the site through the use of materials such as terracotta block, brick, and tile.
Series
1995 - 2001
documents textuels
DR2004:1533
1997-2001
documents textuels
1997-2001