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Andrew Berman. Discreet Architectures / Architetture discrete
Il libro presenta il lavoro dello studio Andrew Berman Architect, fondato a New York da Andrew Berman nel 1995. Nell’approccio di Berman ogni progetto è profondamente legato al luogo, alle persone che lo abiteranno, alla loro cultura e bisogni. Interventi attenti, che definiscono architetture discrete, in dialogo con il contesto che le accoglie. I progetti presentati sono organizzati per temi che interpretano le differenti occasioni all’interno di una ricerca ampia sull’architettura e sul suo ruolo nella città contemporanea.
Il libro accompagna la mostra "Andrew Berman. Discreet Architectures", allestita nella Casa del Mantegna a Mantova. L’opera di Andrew Berman, caratterizzata da un profondo dialogo con il contesto e da un attento ascolto dei luoghi diventa l’occasione per mettere in evidenza e riscoprire aspetti della Casa del Mantegna in parte nascosti o meno evidenti.The book presents the work of Andrew Berman Architect, a practice founded in New York by Andrew Berman in 1995. In Berman's approach, each project is deeply connected to the place, the people who will inhabit it, their culture and needs. Careful interventions that define discreet architectures in dialogue with the context. The projects presented in the book are organized by themes that interpret different occasions within a broad research on architecture and its role in the contemporary city.
The book involve the exhibition "Andrew Berman: Discreet Architectures", set up on the Casa del Mantegna in Mantova. Andrew Berman’s work, which typically shows a profound dialogue with the context and attentive listening to the places, becomes an opportunity to highlight and rediscover aspects of Casa del Mantegna that are partly hidden or less evident
Letter from Bill and Marion Berman, Fort Riley, Kansas, to All, St. Louis, Missouri, includes a note written in Hebrew, March 8, 1943
This item is from the Berman Family Papers, which are primarily letters written (often in Hebrew) by Dr. William (Bill) Berman and his wife Marion, while Bill was stationed in Fort Riley, Kansas. Bill served as an Army doctor during World War II
Letter from Captain Bill Berman, Fort Riley, Kansas, to Mama, Sadie, Iz, and Gang, St. Louis, Missouri, includes a note written in Hebrew, November 30, 1943
This item is from the Berman Family Papers, which are primarily letters written (often in Hebrew) by Dr. William (Bill) Berman and his wife Marion, while Bill was stationed in Fort Riley, Kansas. Bill served as an Army doctor during World War II
Letter from Bill Berman, Fort Riley, Kansas, to Folks, St. Louis, Missouri, includes a note written in Hebrew, December 26, 1942
This item is from the Berman Family Papers, which are primarily letters written (often in Hebrew) by Dr. William (Bill) Berman and his wife Marion, while Bill was stationed in Fort Riley, Kansas. Bill served as an Army doctor during World War II
Letter from Captain Bill Berman, Fort Riley, Kansas, to Folks, St. Louis, Missouri, includes a note written in Hebrew, July 9, 1944
This item is from the Berman Family Papers, which are primarily letters written (often in Hebrew) by Dr. William (Bill) Berman and his wife Marion, while Bill was stationed in Fort Riley, Kansas. Bill served as an Army doctor during World War II
Letter from Bill Berman, Fort Riley, Kansas, to Folks, St. Louis, Missouri, includes a note written in Hebrew, January 7, 1943
This item is from the Berman Family Papers, which are primarily letters written (often in Hebrew) by Dr. William (Bill) Berman and his wife Marion, while Bill was stationed in Fort Riley, Kansas. Bill served as an Army doctor during World War II
Letter from Bill Berman, Fort Riley, Kansas, to Sadie and Iz Rosen, St. Louis, Missouri, includes a note written in Hebrew, July 17, 1942
This item is from the Berman Family Papers, which are primarily letters written (often in Hebrew) by Dr. William (Bill) Berman and his wife Marion, while Bill was stationed in Fort Riley, Kansas. Bill served as an Army doctor during World War II
Interview with Hyman Berman
Clarke A. Chambers interviews Hyman Berman, member of the Department of History. Berman speaks about his work at the University of Minnesota and his work related to labor history.Berman, Hyman; Chambers, Clarke A.. (1984). Interview with Hyman Berman. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/48992
Berman Family Papers, MSS.2329
Abstract: Contains material created and kept by the Berman family of St. Louis, Missouri. Letters written by Dr. William (Bill) Berman and his wife Marian make up the bulk of the collection. These are primarily letters written, often in Hebrew, by Bill and Marian from Ft. Riley, Kansas, where Bill served as an Army doctor during World War Two.Scope and Content Note: Contains material created and kept by the Berman family of St. Louis, Missouri. Letters written by Dr. William (Bill) Berman and his wife Marian make up the bulk of the collection. These are primarily letters written by Bill and Marian from Ft. Riley, Kansas, where Bill served as an Army doctor. The letters contain information about life on the base and include a lot of requests for food and supplies that the Bermans could not get in Kansas. Bill wrote a large number of the letters in Hebrew. Other matierals include postcards and letters written by Debby Schwartz to her grandmother,Celia Berman, and her aunt and uncle Iz and Sadie Rosen.The collection is divided into two series: Bill and Marian Berman Material and the Berman and Rosen Families Material.Biographical/Historical Note: According to the 1920 U.S. Census, Meyer and Celia Berman of St. Louis, Missouri, were both born in Russia. The Bermans had three children: Sadie, Ethel, and William (born in St. Louis, June 16, 1910).By the 1930s Meyer appears to have died. Sadie married Isidore (Iz) Rosen, and Celia Berman lived with them. Ethel married and had at least one child named Debby Schwartz.William Berman attended Washington University in St. Louis and earned his M.D. in 1935. He married Marian Mendle, November 12, 1941. They had a child named William on November 21, 1943. Dr. Berman died in St. Louis, Missouri, June 9, 2000
IL TEATRO DI DEVON AVENUE. SCENE DI VITA RUSSA A CHICAGO
Prima edizione italiana di cinque plays del medico scrittore e drammaturgo Michail Aleksandrovič Berman-Cikinovskij, con un saggio di postfazione dell'Autor
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