Volume 28 of The Cycle, the 1940 yearbook for the Armour Institute of Technology. The Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was known by... Show moreVolume 28 of The Cycle, the 1940 yearbook for the Armour Institute of Technology. The Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was known by three different titles: Integral (1898-1910), Senior Class Book (1911-1912), and The Cycle (1913-1940). A 1902 volume of Integral is not a part of Galvin Library collections; it is uncertain of a yearbook was published that year. Publication of the Armour Institute ceased in 1941, when the Armour Institute of Technology merged with the Lewis Institute to form Illinois Institute of Technology. Sponsorship: Scanning of the Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was supported in part by an award from the Illinois State Historical Records Advisory Board, through funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, National Archives and Records Administration. Show less
Volume 1 of The Cycle, the 1913 yearbook for the Armour Institute of Technology. The Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was known by... Show moreVolume 1 of The Cycle, the 1913 yearbook for the Armour Institute of Technology. The Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was known by three different titles: Integral (1898-1910), Senior Class Book (1911-1912), and The Cycle (1913-1940). A 1902 volume of Integral is not a part of Galvin Library collections; it is uncertain of a yearbook was published that year. Publication of the Armour Institute ceased in 1941, when the Armour Institute of Technology merged with the Lewis Institute to form Illinois Institute of Technology. Sponsorship: Scanning of the Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was supported in part by an award from the Illinois State Historical Records Advisory Board, through funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, National Archives and Records Administration. Show less
Volume 14 of The Cycle, the 1926 yearbook for the Armour Institute of Technology. The Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was known by... Show moreVolume 14 of The Cycle, the 1926 yearbook for the Armour Institute of Technology. The Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was known by three different titles: Integral (1898-1910), Senior Class Book (1911-1912), and The Cycle (1913-1940). A 1902 volume of Integral is not a part of Galvin Library collections; it is uncertain of a yearbook was published that year. Publication of the Armour Institute ceased in 1941, when the Armour Institute of Technology merged with the Lewis Institute to form Illinois Institute of Technology. Sponsorship: Scanning of the Armour Institute of Technology yearbooks was supported in part by an award from the Illinois State Historical Records Advisory Board, through funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, National Archives and Records Administration. Show less
Photograph taken by Mary Henry in 1946 as part of a photography course taught by László Moholy-Nagy at the Institute of Design. Inscription on... Show morePhotograph taken by Mary Henry in 1946 as part of a photography course taught by László Moholy-Nagy at the Institute of Design. Inscription on verso: "Beginning photo lessons in Moholy-Nagy's class, learning to focus the camera, develop & print the negative. Chicago, 1946, Institute of Design." Show less
Photograph of Mary Henry surrounded by her paintings, Mendocino, California, 1966.This photograph was apparently distributed by Estelle... Show morePhotograph of Mary Henry surrounded by her paintings, Mendocino, California, 1966.This photograph was apparently distributed by Estelle Grunewald, founder of Art to Industry, a business that attempted to connect artists with corporate patrons. Inscription on verso: "Mary Henry 2222 East White Fir Place Freeland, WA 98249 206-331-3404 / Artist surrounded by her paintings, Mendocino, Calif. 1966." A small label is affixed to verso that reads "Please return: Estelle Grunewald Art-to-Industry 4621 Ruthelma Ave. P.A." Photographer unknown. Show less
Photograph taken by Mary Henry in 1946 as part of a photography course taught by László Moholy-Nagy at the Institute of Design. Inscription on... Show morePhotograph taken by Mary Henry in 1946 as part of a photography course taught by László Moholy-Nagy at the Institute of Design. Inscription on verso: "Photographed for Moholy-Nagy's class at the Institute of Design, 1946. A lesson in lighting the subject." Show less
Photograph of Mary Henry in her garden in Mendocino, California in the late 1960s. Inscription on verso: "Mary Henry looking at her 'Japanese'... Show morePhotograph of Mary Henry in her garden in Mendocino, California in the late 1960s. Inscription on verso: "Mary Henry looking at her 'Japanese' pond in the garden at Mendocino, late sixties." Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown. Date indicated is an estimate. Show less
Photomontage of an aerial photograph of the Illinois Institute of Technology campus circa 1941 and the Illinois Institute of Technology campus... Show morePhotomontage of an aerial photograph of the Illinois Institute of Technology campus circa 1941 and the Illinois Institute of Technology campus master plan by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. Show less
Aerial photograph of the Illinois Institute of Technology campus, looking northwest. Date of photograph is unknown. Date range provided is... Show moreAerial photograph of the Illinois Institute of Technology campus, looking northwest. Date of photograph is unknown. Date range provided is approximate. Show less
Photograph of Mary Henry painting an interior mural at Hewlett-Packard in Palo, Alto, California. Photographer unknown. Inscription on verso: ... Show morePhotograph of Mary Henry painting an interior mural at Hewlett-Packard in Palo, Alto, California. Photographer unknown. Inscription on verso: "Mary Henry 2222 East White Fir Place Freeland, WA 98249 206-331-3404 / The artist shown working on the Hewlett-Packard murals. The plant is built in the Stanford Industrial Park, Palo Alto, California, 1958." Show less
Typescript letter with signature from Frank T. Walsh, Director of Corporate Industrial Design at the Ampex Corporation, to Mary Henry. The... Show moreTypescript letter with signature from Frank T. Walsh, Director of Corporate Industrial Design at the Ampex Corporation, to Mary Henry. The letter was composed in response to the promotional material Henry provided Ampex in advance of her first solo exhibition, which opened in 1967 at the Ampex Corporation in Redwood City, California. Show less