Stereoscope and View Offer

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Stereoscope and View Offer M - jN-- - lfr S- - M -- SHE NATlUJSAi IKIBUJXIS WASHINGTON D a THURSDAY JANUARY 31 1907 force of setting a nail and pounding it New Mexico Speaker Cannon and Sen- ¬ satisfied with him Mr Shonts retained NEW BLOOD IN SENATE gently day by day year by year till he THE ISTHMIAN CANAL ¬ ME got ators Frye Halefrnd Blackburn were his Presidency of the Clover Leaf Rail How the Deaf it in to the head Curtis is not a members of tW House when he was road which the President did not alto ¬ full blooded Indian as has been said He declined a third election to Con ¬ gether approve Furthermore Mr but is thi son of the late Capt Curtis gress from New Mexico He was a Chief Shontss idea of digging the canal seem ¬ Are -- Engineer Sfaontss Resignation Wel Made That August Body Undergoing Some Striking Changes Result a veteran of the war of the rebellion member tlR Republican ed Washington to Hear an Indian of National to be a life of ease in and mother His mothers Committee for 121 years from 1875 to comedHe was Not Wholly Satisfac- ¬ for the Commission Chairman with cf the Elections So Far 1S87 and he conducted the Blaine cam- ¬ plenty of society for his wife and yuSSer from defective hearing paign In 1884 tory to the President and Secretary write to GEO P WAY of Detroit who Tiln 192 he was made daughters Mrs Shonts and the two lor twenty flve years was so deaf Secretary of Wan by President Harri- ¬ Misses Shonts from Europe a no was Dractlrtiiv it t that Taft Fnjineer Stevens More Accept ¬ returned son serving In thaiCabinet to the close few months ago with a great flourish clal Intercourse with his rellow men After the 4th of March next the haps he lsnot an orator but the peo- ¬ of the Harrisono Administration In family was After years of experimenting In able Mr Olivers Bid and Mis Asso- ¬ and apparently some of the order to United States Senate will scarcely know ple of Kentucky loved and love him 1S94 he was elected Senator and has responsible for the story that President relieve nis own case Itself ami will hae to take a day oil He la simply the representative of the served continuously since ciations Roosevelt had wanted them to come to Sir Way discovered ana acquainted own per- ¬ older Idea going down before the new tho principle of THE set with its Down in Texaa Senator Bailey is Washington for a Winter of social gayc WAY EAR DRUMS sonnel To begin with It will have idea fighting for his dibnor and his political tics Those who know President Roose- ¬ To day with a pair more young uioou tnat is more men Senator Dubois has made a great life against as -- charrsr serious s those Affairs Washington velt are well aware that that sort of of these drums In his lingering about the half century and fight In Idaho and been defeated by which sent thea brilliant Senator Bur-¬ at are rapidly advertising at his expenso would be ears Mr Way can even vi iuvv it in eurs umu uur ueiurc in the Mormon Church his friends insist ton of Kansaso to a cell He converging into a broad and deep but hear low whispers felons quiet is anything but agreeable to hlln Its hltory Mr Borah who conies to succeed him has been triumphantly re elected in current There less agitation Chairman Shonts was plainly deter- ¬ The WAY EAR In the second place there will be but is a young lawyer credited with no face ot the charges must on the surface Jerhaps the rapids DRUMS are rnadu but remain have mined not to go to the Isthmus to live from a peculiarly sen ¬ Inconsiderable powers of oratory and In the Lone Star State to fight all been passed The shaking of ¬ it out fists over He preferred that Chief Engineer John sitized material mold with the backing of the interests that having declared that unless he s the Brownsville nffray has drudg- ¬ audi- ¬ ceased The - F Stevens should attend to the ed to fit In the have been opposed to the Dubois view cleared to tho satisfaction of all he President has been stutfy- ery and make the dirt fly The Chair ¬ tory canal and axe en- ¬ - of politics will resign the honors just fur- ¬ tirely Invisible v - x conferred man could occupy the mahogany On tTi Another Harvard man comes to the As as ¬ tt far settled the Senate will nished offices in Washington to advan Drum Is a resilient rtna by National legislature in Jonathan stand as follows tage and keep in touch with the War curve rlntr formed the Is Massaclu- - Just before the Drum tapers to a Bourne He a native of Russell A Alger Mich Rep suc- ¬ Department and the White House Ho point This absolutely prevents the setts and an alumnus of Harvard and ceeded by William Alden Smith Rep could head the organization and look drum collapsing In the ear Yet these incidntally has been a member of the J Frank Allee Del Rep succeeded after the administration of affairs Let Drums are so soft and pliable that they old liw firm that has tent four of its by Harry A Richardson Rep do the construction work As cannot injure the most delicate ear pas ¬ members to the Senate Mitchell others sage Augustus O Bacon Ga Dcm suc- ¬ the organization and administration you Simon Gearin nnd Pounie The firm ceeds himself work was completed there seem- ¬ Remember ar not askrd to take has continuous though its title about any treatment you run no risk of been Joseph W Bailey Tex Dcm suc- ¬ ed little more for Mr Shonts to do and using something which might leave you has i hinged cession in doubt accordingly his resignation came at an worse than before Its use You are sim ¬ Norris Brown who will come from Joseph H Berry Ark Dem suc- ¬ opportune time He is to have charge ply asked to Investigate a mechanical Nebraska is one of the young men of ceeded by Jefferson Davis Dem of the Ryan Bclmont interborough device perfected after years of study by the new crop of Senator1- - He has been ¬ a deaf man who by his own skill and J S C Blackburn Ky Dem succeed- ¬ roads in New York City and will prob- research now hears perfectly lAttorney General of Nebraska and in ed by Thomas H Paynter Dem ably be an acceptable man in that nau lo prosecute casea If you have any trouble with your lilac cipiruy Henry E Burnham N H Rep suc ¬ place He give3 up a 30000 salary as hearing write Mr Way tell him against the railroads to collect in Chairman and he receives from your the by ceeds himself what cause of deafness and how Ions created taxes levied against them Alfred W Benson Kan Rep suc the interborough organization is not you have been deaf Address your let ¬ the State He may be called a product SENATOR SIMON GUGGENHEIM ceeded by Charles Curtis Rep known Presumably it is as much as he ters to GEORGE P WAY 117 Majestic of the Bryan regime for while he is a Edward W Carmack Tcnn Dem has been getting from the Government Building Detroit Michigan riBBHK JP Republican jet he conies as the rep years ago mother who died onlv a few succeeded by Robert L Taylor Dem Chief Knclnrcr Steven resentative of the radical wis one of the treaty Indians of the w imam a t lark Mont Dem suc Republicanism whose beginnings Kaw or Kansas tribe named Julie ceeded by Joseph M Dixon Dem Chief Engineer Stevens will succeed of fraud in connection with harbar in Nebraska dated from the rise of Pappenheiin and her name appears on W Murray Crane Mass Rep suc Mr Shonts as Chairman and head man work at Savannah Ga The case was Bryan to influence He was nominated the treaty Washington knows little him a notable one It was years before the between the United States ceeds himself but about Government get by the State Republican convention last Government and that tribe of Indians Shelby M Cullon 111 Rep succeeds except that he Is a determined and like could Gaynor and Summer over Senator J H Millard they up new an efficient man and been ap j Greene back from Canada whither they made when took their himself wise has uuu jieu whom he will succeed reservation in Indian Tenitory Sena ¬ Jonathan P Dolllver Iowa Rep plying himself on the Isthmus Wheth- ¬ The fiery voung Hotspur of the Ten tor Curtis and all his children hold succeeds himself er he has the capacity to direct the Mr Oliver must associate himself with Independent ¬ nessee mountains Carmack goes down lands in hcveialty witii the Kaw tribe John V Drjden N J Rep succcS execution of the great project is un ¬ contractors at an ear before Fiddling Bob Taylor He U because of their Indian blood sion in doubt known here but undoubtedly he is as ly date and form a 5000000 corpora ¬ one once J tion for the work At SENATOR WILLIAM E BORAH of the Tijlor brothers who Cnitfs is a KansaA product He was Fred T Dubois Idaho Dem suc- - capable In that direction as Mr Shonts least J150000tf ran against t ach othT for Goernor of born in Topeka on 2 1S00 by Rep ever was and more likely to be sue must be paid In cash and 1500001 Jan Ills ceeded William E Borah more - Tennessee Parniaek can talk most only education he received in Topekn 15 Ara cessful because he resided on the must be in the form- of solvent two Democrats In the Senate who hail eloquently logi Stephen KIklns W Rep suc has subscriptions and ¬ and for his kind of a He earned his lirst money riding race Isthmus long time and has compre the other 2000000 from Northern State These are Tel- convincingly party ceeds himself SENATOR WM ALDEN SMITH a may be devoted securing cian niot for his horses at Conntv fairs and later as a Murphy Foster La Dcm sue- - hensive knowledge of affairs connected to a bond ler of Colorado and Nixon of Nevada He used to Mush around in the House J If Mr Oliver succeeds with his plana Four States have Democratic Senators hack driver in Topekn coeds himself ing
Recommended publications
  • Mining Wars: Corporate Expansion and Labor Violence in the Western Desert, 1876-1920
    UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones 2009 Mining wars: Corporate expansion and labor violence in the Western desert, 1876-1920 Kenneth Dale Underwood University of Nevada Las Vegas Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/thesesdissertations Part of the Latin American History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Repository Citation Underwood, Kenneth Dale, "Mining wars: Corporate expansion and labor violence in the Western desert, 1876-1920" (2009). UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones. 106. http://dx.doi.org/10.34917/1377091 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MINING WARS: CORPORATE EXPANSION AND LABOR VIOLENCE IN THE WESTERN DESERT, 1876-1920 by Kenneth Dale Underwood Bachelor of Arts University of Southern California 1992 Master
    [Show full text]
  • Rackstraw Downes
    RACKSTRAW DOWNES 1939 Born in Kent, England 1961 BA in English Literature, Cambridge University, England 1961-62 English-Speaking Union Traveling Fellowship 1963-64 BFA and MFA in Painting, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 1964-65 Post-Graduate Fellowship. University of Pennsylvania 1967-79 Teaches painting at the University of Pennsylvania 1969 Marjorie Heilman Visiting Artist, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania 1971 Yaddo Residence Fellowship 1974 Ingram Merrill Fellowship 1978 CAPS 1980 National Endowment for the Arts Grant 1989 Academy-Institute Award, American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters 1998 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship 1999 Inducted into the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters 2009 Delivered Ninth Annual Raymond Lecture for the Archives of American Art 2009 The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellowship The artist lives and works in New York City and Presidio, Texas Solo Exhibitions 2018 Rackstraw Downes, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, NY, Sept 5-Oct 14 2014 Rackstraw Downes, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, NY, April 3- May 3 2012 Rackstraw Downes, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, NY, Oct. 11 – Nov. 24 2010-11 Rackstraw Downes: Onsite Paintings, 1974–2009, The Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, New York; travels to: Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME; Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, NC Rackstraw Downes: Under the Westside Highway, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT 2010 Rackstraw Downes: A Selection of Drawings 1980-2010, Betty
    [Show full text]
  • Esperanza Cortes Exhibition Guide
    CANTAR DE CIEGOS / SONG OF THE BLIND E S P E R A N Z A C O R T É S S E P T E M B E R 4 , 2 0 2 0 - F E B R U A R Y 6 , 2 0 2 1 M A Y E R G A L L E R Y T C V A . O R G CONTENT 1 CONTENT 2 - 5 ABOUT THE ARTIST 6 ARTIST STATEMENT 7 EXHIBITION STATEMENT 8 - 15 WORKS IN EXHIBIT 16 BEHIND THE SCENES 17 PROMPTS AND ACTIVITIES 18 THANK YOU PAGE 1 about the artist Cortés is a recipient of awards including: The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship; BRIC Media Arts Fellowship; Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Creative Engagement Grant; Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grant; U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE: Art in Embassies Program; Puffin Foundation Project Grant; Bronx Museum of the Art, AIM Program; New York State Biennial; Robert Esperanza Cortés is a Colombian born Rauchenberg Foundation, Change contemporary multidisciplinary artist Grant; New York Foundation for the based in New York City. Cortés has Arts and Sustained Achievement in exhibited in the United States in solo the Visual Arts Award. and group exhibitions in venues including Smack Mellon Gallery, Cortés’s is a recipient of residencies Neuberger Museum of Art, Bronx including: McColl Center for Arts + Museum of Art, Queens Museum, El Innovation: Museum of Arts and Museo Del Barrio, MoMA PS1, Socrates Design Artist Studio Residency; BRIC Sculpture Park and White-box Gallery Workspace Program; The Caldera in New York City.
    [Show full text]
  • Collection 1880S–1940S, Floor 5 Checklist
    The Museum of Modern Art Fifth Floor, 1880s-1940s 5th Fl: 500, Constantin Brancusi Constantin Brâncuși Bird in Space 1928 Bronze 54 x 8 1/2 x 6 1/2" (137.2 x 21.6 x 16.5 cm) Given anonymously 153.1934 Fall 19 - No restriction Constantin Brâncuși Fish Paris 1930 Blue-gray marble 21 x 71 x 5 1/2" (53.3 x 180.3 x 14 cm), on three-part pedestal of one marble 5 1/8" (13 cm) high, and two limestone cylinders 13" (33 cm) high and 11" (27.9 cm) high x 32 1/8" (81.5 cm) diameter at widest point Acquired through the Lillie P. Bliss Bequest (by exchange) 695.1949.a-d Fall 19 - No restriction Constantin Brâncuși Mlle Pogany version I, 1913 (after a marble of 1912) Bronze with black patina 17 1/4 x 8 1/2 x 12 1/2" (43.8 x 21.5 x 31.7 cm), on limestone base 5 3/4 x 6 1/8 x 7 3/8" (14.6 x 15.6 x 18.7 cm) 17 1/4 × 8 1/2 × 12 1/2" (43.8 × 21.6 × 31.8 cm) Other (bronze): 17 1/4 × 8 1/2 × 12 1/2" (43.8 × 21.6 × 31.8 cm) 5 3/4 × 6 1/8 × 7 3/8" (14.6 × 15.6 × 18.7 cm) Other (approx. weight): 40 lb. (18.1 kg) Acquired through the Lillie P. Bliss Bequest (by exchange) 2.1953 Fall 19 - No restriction Constantin Brâncuși Maiastra 1910-12 White marble 22" (55.9 cm) high, on three-part limestone pedestal 70" (177.8 cm) high, of which the middle section is Double Caryatid, c.
    [Show full text]
  • GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION and ITS GLOBAL NETWORK a Thesis
    GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION AND ITS GLOBAL NETWORK A Thesis Presented to The Graduate Faculty of The University of Akron In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Masters of Arts Xingyu Hai December, 2012 GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION AND ITS GLOBAL NETWORK Xingyu Hai Thesis Approved: Accepted: _________________________________ _________________________________ Advisor School Director Mr. Durand Pope Dr. Ann Usher _________________________________ _________________________________ Committee Member Dean of the College Mr. Rod Bengston Dr. Chand Midha _________________________________ _________________________________ Committee Member Dean of the Graduate School Mr. Neil Sapienza Dr. George R. Newkome _________________________________ Date ii ABSTRACT This work deals with the Guggenheim Foundation’s “Global Museum Network” and its international collaborations with a variety of partners. It also includes a look at the global business management model that has been developed by the Guggenheim Foundation administrators. The main purpose of this work is to examine the “branding system” which was created and utilized by the Guggenheim Foundation and to analyze the system’s advantages and disadvantages within their global operation. The Guggenheim brand system depends on the multination art policies, the development of foreign funding sources, and dealing with international partners and sponsors. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION……………………………………………….…....1 II. CULTURE LEGACY OF AMERICAN PHILATHOPIST…………..3 III. BRAND, BRANDING
    [Show full text]
  • Fall 2000, Volume 90 Number 4
    TIhe MAqAziNE of ColoRAdo Scl-iool of MInes Or. John U. Trefny: An interview with the president 4 Events Calendar Mines researchers receive two R&D 100 Awards: Two professors honored in R&D Magazine 9 Short Takes 10 Mines teams up with a dinosaur named "Sue" CSM helps design and teach a K-12 institute on paleontology 16 Mines Athletics 18 MINES Alumni Events Dr. John U. Trefny Mines is published quarterly by the Colorado School of President, Colorado School of Mines Mines and the CSM Alumni December January February March Association for alumni and By Marsha Konegni friends of the School. C Denver-area Lunch Bunch Colorado ET Denver West Lunch Bunch Comments and suggestions Where are the students? / holiday party at meets at the Chamber Players / Section breakfast, 8 meets at the are welcome. They may the Petroleum Club, Buffalo Rose, feature David Krakauer Sheraton Hotel, Buffalo Rose in be directed to the phone I remember What Is CSM's role in education? 555 17th St., Golden, 11:30 a.m. (clarinet) at the . 137 Union Street, Golden, 11:30 a.m. numbers or address listed very clearly For all our students—from K-12 programs, Denver, 11 a.m. Green Center, 7 p.m. Lakewood, 6:45 am. below. attending my to undergraduate, to graduate, to Call 303-273-3295 The concert is free, but or 3290 for Wings Over a fund-raising freshman professional outreach-—^we must Alumni Tennis John Trefny reservations. 2 Denver, a tour of reception with the Grand Junction assembly more continuously evolve to meet changing the Airplane Museum artist is $50 (adults) or Section luncheon at 1 5 event in Phoenix President with Mines tennis than 40 years circumstances and societal needs, constantly at Lowry Field, 1 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Commencement Program, 2019
    263 rd COMMENCEMENT MAY 20, 2019 20, MAY R D COMMENCEME 263 NT CLA S S O F 2 019 M A Y 20, 20 1 9 CLASS OF 2019 KEEPING FRANKLIN’S PROMISE In the words of one elegiac tribute, “Great men have two lives: one which occurs while they work on this earth; a second which begins at the day of their death and continues as long as their ideas and conceptions remain powerful.” These words befit the great Benjamin Franklin, whose inventions, innovations, ideas, writings, and public works continue to shape our thinking and renew the Republic he helped to create and the institutions he founded, including the University of Pennsylvania. Nowhere does Franklin feel more contemporary, more revolutionary, and more alive than at the University of Pennsylvania. His startling vision of a secular, nonsectarian Academy that would foster an “Inclination join’d with an Ability to serve Mankind, one’s Country, Friends and Family” has never ceased to challenge Penn to redefine the scope and mission of the modern American university. When pursued vigorously and simultaneously, the two missions – developing the inclination to do good and the ability to do well – merge to help form a more perfect university that educates more capable citizens for our democracy. Penn has embodied and advanced Franklin’s revolutionary vision for 279 years. Throughout its history, Penn has extended the frontiers of higher learning and research to produce graduates and scholars whose work has enriched the nation and all of humanity. The modern liberal arts curriculum as we know it can trace its roots to Franklin’s innovation to have Penn students study international commerce and foreign languages.
    [Show full text]
  • Roswell Daily Record, 01-15-1907 H
    University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository Roswell Daily Record, 1903-1910 New Mexico Historical Newspapers 1-15-1907 Roswell Daily Record, 01-15-1907 H. E. M. Bear Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/roswell_record_news Recommended Citation Bear, H. E. M.. "Roswell Daily Record, 01-15-1907." (1907). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/roswell_record_news/1031 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the New Mexico Historical Newspapers at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Roswell Daily Record, 1903-1910 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. To)' To) Iffiif 3 E VOLUME 4. ROSWELL, NEW MEXICO, TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 15, 1907 NUMBER 270 Clarence Ullery, The Undertake! , has "This Space, J sources without resort to a foreign President Diaz the medal and diplo- Eames, Mme. Melba, Sousa'a Band, I loan, in an interview with tne cor- - ma awarded the chief executive of Pryor's Band, and others of the high- TO RECLAIfVi respondeat of the Associated Press WELTER Mexico by the St. Louis World's Fair WRECK est class musical entertainers in the today the minister said he hoped that officials, today called on Ambassador world will be reproduced. It will be a large part of the deficit which has Thompson, ; Consul General Gotts-chal- k given tor the benefit of the church, already been reduced from $149,300, and Albino E. Monro, the Mex- and an admission fee of 25 cents will SWAMPS 000 to $121,300,000 by he surplus of AND TAYLOR ican" commissioner at the World's KILLS FOUR be charged.
    [Show full text]
  • NRHP Registration Form
    NPS Form 10-900 OMB Control No. 1024-0018 expiration date 03/31/2022 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in National Register Bulletin, How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. 1. Name of Property Historic name: American Smelting and Refining Company Southwestern Department Headquarters Other names/site number: ASARCO Southwestern Department Headquarters, ASARCO Headquarters Name of related multiple property listing: N/A (Enter "N/A" if property is not part of a multiple property listing ____________________________________________________________________________ 2. Location Street & number: 1150 North 7th Avenue City or town: Tucson State: Arizona County: Pima Not For Publication: Vicinity: ____________________________________________________________________________ 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this nomination ___ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic
    [Show full text]
  • Carl Zigrosser Papers Ms
    Carl Zigrosser papers Ms. Coll. 6 Finding aid prepared by Felicia McMahon. Last updated on April 06, 2020. University of Pennsylvania, Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts 1991 Carl Zigrosser papers Table of Contents Summary Information...................................................................................................................................4 Biography/History.........................................................................................................................................4 Scope and Contents.......................................................................................................................................7 Administrative Information...........................................................................................................................8 Controlled Access Headings......................................................................................................................... 8 Other Finding Aids note................................................................................................................................9 Collection Inventory................................................................................................................................... 10 General Correspondence....................................................................................................................... 10 Family Correspondence.......................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • A History of the Road Controversy at Colorado National Monument
    · .. - .- _. .. ..: ~ . · ... .' •, . .: ·.·· ... -· .. -·. ._ :.·. ·.-- ·. ' .-.. ', '. ·. _. ... .: · .., ·· .. ·· . •.: . .. · -. ~··' ·· .. .,_- ·-A< c.1a$sic · -- Weste~ ·· Q~~rreJ: _ ; : A :·mst~l-y ::of:-ihejl4'ad: .Co11tr~ve~y :. at ·· ..... ·· ·· · :Colorado Natiollal :Monulnenf~ · . ··' .. ... ·. ·,: .. -· ._,- . · •.· ::. : : . .. :·.· ·· ' ... .. .. ·.-· -· . ~x -- - ... __ .-... ~ ' .... - •:···· · ..... -. -:.·, . _.· -:··· . , ·.· __ : .,., : .._ ... ,. : . , . ·, · ·.. ·.· ,: -Lisa: _: s2hoc_ h~R()berts :·- ·- ·· · ,_ · _. ._...... ! • ~ .. ·.-;. ,: ·._ --. ,· .•.·· .. .> '! -·-: .. ·' ·· ,' .i.'. '; .. ... · ...· ...... .. ._. , .. ·.· .. , ·.. ' .. .·· ' .'·;. ~. ;.. ·:. : . ·.".' . ; . .· . .... ... ·.:• -'.· . • ! ," -, :· . .··. .. ;,. ' ~ ; • ' .·.· .~-. .. -.·: ' , _, .. • : .. ~~ ...,v-__· .. -r. - ' '!" ~ -· ••l : ·., ~ > ... ·. .. _. ,. ..... - ··"\ :;:~ :. : "'~--·- ...:' ..:. ~--': ·?(-~ ·.. ·. ~ . \ _.,_- · > .. ,,;_ , -~ . ·( - '.\. - : .:. .-. • --..:1' ·-'·:·.. -•. .. -·:: . ·.: · .. -·· . · ··. -. ·. -~ ·.. ..·. .. ... :· ··"... ... :. -- ~ .. :;'. ~ .~ .- : ·.·" '/ ·> cuLJiJRAL RESOuRCES 'SELECTIONS'' ' -·. ~-.: . - .. " . :.· .No> 10- ·-- ..- -: Inte~o~nt~in _ -R~gi_o_n ·. -- - ·_ < . ,·. .. .... -. 1.997 · ... ·· . ... ·.. _ :Nat1otial Pa.rk:Servk:e ". ' - , · . .'.· •':. ' • _; .. .'- " . :~ ,. " "~ · ., . ... .;. .. ··; : • · ... ·· .. ~· .· . ; .. ... -.:· ... ~ . ·.: ' ---~-., . " :.: · ;! _-_- .... :·._ ..: · .: :.~- :....... ·:-, · .. ,·. .. , .. .. ... •!' ;· . .. •· ..-.\.· ·.. · A Classic Western
    [Show full text]
  • David Maisel Cv 4 2018R1
    DAVID MAISEL [email protected] www.davidmaisel.com EDUCATION 2006 MFA, Fine Arts, California College of the Arts, San Francisco, CA 1984 BA, Department of Art and Archaeology, summa cum laude, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 1988 Graduate School of Design, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA AWARDS/GRANTS/FELLOWSHIPS/HONORS 2018 Guggenheim Fellowship in the Creative Arts, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation 2015 Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, YBCA 100 Honoree, San Francisco, CA 2011 Center for Cultural Innovation, Investing In Artists Grant, Los Angeles, CA 2008 Headlands Center For The Arts, Visiting Artist Residency, San Francisco, CA 2008 Prix Pictet Award in Photography (shortlisted), London, United Kingdom 2007 Getty Research Institute, Visiting Scholar, Los Angeles, CA 1992 Opsis Foundation, Photography Award, New York, NY 1990 National Endowment for the Arts, Individual Visual Artists’ Fellowship, Washington, D.C. 1984 Princeton University, Francis LeMoyne Page Award in the Visual Arts, Princeton, NJ SYMPOSIA 2016 Harvard University Graduate School of Design, “David Maisel: Black Maps” symposium, Cambridge, MA 2009 New York Institute for the Humanities, “Library of Dust” Symposium, New York, NY MONOGRAPHS 2018 Proving Ground. Steidl: Göttingen, Germany, 2018. William L. Fox, Tyler Green, David Maisel, Geoff Manaugh (release pending). 2018 Mount St Helens: Afterlife. Ivorypress: Madrid, Spain, 2018. Gary Snyder, Marcia Bjornerud 2013 Black Maps: American Landscape and the Apocalyptic Sublime. Steidl: Göttingen, Germany, 2013. Natasha Egan, David Maisel, Geoff Manaugh, Alan Rapp, Kirsten Rian, Mark Strand, Joseph Thompson, and Kazys Varnelis. 2011 History’s Shadow. Nazraeli Press: Portland, OR, 2011. Jonathan Lethem. 2008 Library of Dust. Chronicle Books: San Francisco, CA, 2008.
    [Show full text]