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How Florence Knoll Created the "Knoll" Look and Revolutionized the Modern Interior

Type: LECTURE
Date: 6/30/2011
Time: 6:00PM
Location: Bard Graduate Center
Address: 38 West 86th St.
                New York , New York

 

When: 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM THURSDAY, JUNE 30  Where: Bard Graduate Center 38 West 86th Street New York, NY 10024  In 1965 Florence Knoll retired from Knoll Associates, Inc., whereshe had served as design director and head of both KnollTextiles and the Knoll Planning Unit. From its founding in the late 1930s, the firm exerted a profound influence on the modern interior through the design and production of furniture and textiles and through its interior design service for private and corporate clients. In this lecture Bobbye Tigerman will trace Florence Knoll's education and training and explore how she combined the resources of the firm's three divisions to create the distinctive "Knoll look";ï¿ and to shape the nature of modern postwar interior design.

www.bgc.bard.edu


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The Critical Moment: Architecture in the Expanded Field
Thursday, September 15, 2011
through Saturday, November 05, 2011
Cooper Union
The Arthur A. Houghton Jr. Gallery
7 East 7th Street
New York, New York

 

Debuting in the Houghton Gallery at Cooper Union, graduates of the Master of Architecture II Program will have their innovative 2011 thesis projects on display in "The Critical Moment: Architecture in the expanded field." The show, which is free, marks the first public viewing of the Master students' work. Without prescribed boundaries, the projects address a myriad of critical issues shaping today's architectural discourse, ranging from urban theory to the present condition of globalization and the continual emergence of new scientific developments and technologies. The exhibition illuminates the graduates' year-long extensive research using literature, photography, drawing, technology, history and urban studies to develop innovative programs, all of which feature configurations and narratives that bring forth potential solutions that may not be obvious to the viewer.

 

In 2009, the Master of Architecture (M.Arch. II) enrolled its first class and provides graduate students with an innovative approach and experience to a studio-based, design research post-professional degree. Open to applicants with a first professional degree in architecture, students are challenged to push the frontiers of design and form critical responses to modern and contemporary issues in the practice and theory of architecture.

 


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