2,412 research outputs found
Taylor Woolley with Partners
Taylor Woolley at right next to his brother-in-law Clifford (Cliff) Evans. The man at left is unidentified. Image taken in Salt Lake City, at Woolley and Evans architectural firm.Taylor Woolley was a Utah architect who worked under Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin I (c. 1911-1914) at Spring Green Wisconsin during its initial construction
Taylor Woolley Residence
Exterior of Taylor Woolley\u27s home at 1222 East 9th South.Taylor Woolley was a Utah architect who worked under Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin I (c. 1911-1914) at Spring Green Wisconsin during its initial construction
Woolley, Caroline Parry Collection
The majority of the Caroline K. Parry Woolley Collection consists of her research notes and the manuscript of her book "I Would to God." This collection also contains information on Isaac Haight, personal documents, correspondence, and artwork, and other artifacts belonging to Caroling Parry Woolley
Taliesin I Workers
Workmen who built Taliesin I gathered in the workroom in front of the fireplace. Taylor Woolley\u27s brother-in-law Clifford (Cliff) Evans is sitting in the center on the bottom row.Taylor Woolley was a Utah architect who worked under Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin I (c. 1911-1914) at Spring Green Wisconsin during its initial construction
'Something blurred in her': imagining hospitality in Graham Swift's <i>The Light of Day</i>
This article explores the complex position of Kristina, a refugee, in Graham Swift's 2003 novel The Light of Day. She has been overlooked in criticism of the novel, which has tended to focus on the narrator George. I argue that Kristina, in her role as both proximal and distant to the text, allows us to ask pressing questions about the nature of hospitality in relation to the contingent and unstable position of asylum seekers and refugees within British national space. Drawing on Jacques Derrida's work on hospitality, I argue that the novel's self-conscious mode of narrative expression both situates and problematises the imagination as a potential space of accommodation for asylum narratives
Taliesin I Pond
Pond at base of Taliesin I. The pond fed the Taliesin I waterfall.Taylor Woolley was a Utah architect who worked under Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin I (c. 1911-1914) at Spring Green Wisconsin during its initial construction
Taliesin I Terrace
Taliesin I terrace off of the living area, upperfloor view looking northwest.Taylor Woolley was a Utah architect who worked under Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin I (c. 1911-1914) at Spring Green Wisconsin during its initial construction
Woolley, D. Wayne
D. Wayne Woolley, 1963
Woolley, Dilworth Wayne (1914-1966) was a Canadian-born American biochemist, who did important work on vitamin deficiency and was one of the first to study the role of serotonin in brain chemistry.
Woolley spent much of his career at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York City. His major work focused on serotonin in brain chemistry: how substances such as LSD might affect the action of serotonin, how disorders of serotonin function might be responsible for mental disorders, and how serotonin might play a part in memory and learning. Though his career was shorter-lived than expected, subsequent work by others has developed many of Woolley\u27s hypotheses in productive directions. One of his assistants, Robert Bruce Merrifield, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1984, for work on peptide synthesis they did together in the 1950s. In 1940 and in 1948, Woolley received Eli Lilly Awards from the American Chemical Society, for his research. In 1952 he was elected to membership in the National Academy of Sciences. He served as president of the Institute of Nutrition in 1959. Woolley was an author on over 200 research papers and book articles in his thirty-year career. Books by Woolley included A Study of Antimetabolites (1952), and The Biochemical Bases of Psychoses (1962).
Years The Rockefeller University: 1939-1966https://digitalcommons.rockefeller.edu/faculty-members/1079/thumbnail.jp
Taliesin I Dining Area
Dining room space between the terrace and living area.Taylor Woolley was a Utah architect who worked under Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin I (c. 1911-1914) at Spring Green Wisconsin during its initial construction
Taliesin I Living Room
Living room of Taliesin, showing Frank Lloyd Wright\u27s famous Taliesin fireplace.Taylor Woolley was a Utah architect who worked under Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin I (c. 1911-1914) at Spring Green Wisconsin during its initial construction
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