1,726 research outputs found

    Bill Cantrell and Virgil Scott

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    A photograph of Bill Cantrell and Virgil Scott in an automobile,https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_jwdunlopphotograph/1224/thumbnail.jp

    Virgil Scott and Robert Lowen

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    This color photograph features Virgil Scott, Director of the Endowment Association, standing next to Robert Lowen, Director of University Relations.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/mens_basketball_photos/1841/thumbnail.jp

    Virgil Scott\u27s New Building

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    A photograph of the contruction of Virgil Scott\u27s new television building, on 300 E. Abrams Street.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_jwdunlopphotograph/1317/thumbnail.jp

    J. Virgil Scott house, Houston, Texas

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    Black and white photograph of the J. Virgil Scott house.Black and white photograph of the J. Virgil Scott house. William Ward Watkin was the supervising architect for the construction of the Rice Institute, and he founded the Department of Architecture for the Institute. He had a distinguished career as an architect in private practice as well, and his papers include materials on his family life, private practice, and his work at Rice

    David Scott Wilson-Okamura, Virgil in the Renaissance

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    David Scott Wilson-Okamura, Virgil in the RenaissanceCAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS 201

    To the Point - Virgil Topazio

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    Speakers: Virgil Topazio, Scott HochbergContents include: On "To the Point," Scott Hochberg talks to Dr. Virgil Topazio about humanities studies

    Group Portrait of Virgil Scott, Anna Pearl Scott and Eight Unidentified Men and Women at Alumni Fall Conference, 1984

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    Five men and five women pose for a portrait. Written on verso: Alumni Fall Conference 1984, Left to right (seated, front row, 1. Virgil Scott, 2. Anna Pearl Scott, 3.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of historic collections as part of the project: Our Story: Digitizing Publications and Photographs of the Historically Black Atlanta University Center Institutions.</em

    Warner Watson letter to Virgil L. Baker, March 10, 1950

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    A letter addressing the development of the prospective musical for the University of Arkansas' Fine Arts Center opening.Warner Watson, of the American National Theatre and Academy, recognized the potential of developing an Arkansas centered musical based on Charles Morrow Wilson's work for attracting national attention. Virgil Baker was himself an author, playwright, and director. He taught and served as the department head in the Department of Speech and Dramatic Art at the University of Arkansas

    Virgil Suarez, 27th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Virgil Suarez is a Professor in the MFA Creative Writing Program at Florida State University. He received his M.F.A. from Louisiana State University in 1987. Suarez was born in Cuba in 1962. He specializes in creative writing (fiction and poetry) and Latino/a (especially Cuban-American) literature. He is the author of over fifteen books of prose and fiction including 90 Miles (Selected & New Poems) forthcoming in 2005 from the University of Pittsburgh Press, The Soviet Circus Visits Havana & Other Stories (University of Arizona Press, 2004), Landscapers & Dreams (Lousiana Literature Press, 2003) Vespers: Spirituality in America (University of Iowa Press, 2003), and Guide to the Blue Tongue (University of Illinois Press, 2002). Honors include the G. MacCarthur Poetry Prize, 2002, the Book Expo America/Latino Literature Hall of Fame Poetry Prize for best book of poetry (Banyan, LSU Press), several Pushcart Prize nominations, and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts

    [The Death of Virgil by Hermann Broch, #1] : Introduction: Virgil with Clothia.

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    Virgil seated next to a box of scrolls. A layer of engraving is visible behind him, showing a woman and a candelabra, but no ink has been used. Titled, dated and signed along bottom. Numbered AP3 (Artist's proof).The Austrian author Hermann Broch started writing his novel ‘The death of Virgil’ in Austria in 1936, but it was first published in the United States in 1945. The novel narrates the last hours of life of the Roman poet Virgil.Peter Lipman-Wulf (1905-1993) was a German artist and sculptor. Born in Berlin, he studied at the Berlin Academy. In 1933, he left Germany once the Nazis came to power. He immigrated to France in 1933 and in 1939 he was interned in the Les Milles camp in southern France. He eventually immigrated to the United States in 1947. Lipman Wulff worked mostly with wood, bronze, and ceramics in a semi-abstract style reminiscent of German Expressionism. While living in New York he won a Guggenheim fellowship, among other awards, and many commissions. He taught art at Queens College (City University of New York) and Adelphi University for many years, and published articles on art education in Leonardo and other journals. His works were exhibited at numberous galleries in New York City, including a retrospective at the Jewish Museum in 1961, and are present in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, the British Museum in London and the National Museum in Berlin.Digital imag
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