Guide to the Arthur L. Loeb papers, 1950-2008


Rhode Island School of Design Archives
Rhode Island School of Design Archives
Fleet Library at RISD
2 College Street
Providence, RI 02903
Tel: 401-709-5922
Fax: 401-709-5932
email: risdarchives@risd.edu

Published in 2017

Collection Overview

Title: Arthur L. Loeb papers
Date range: 1950-2008
Creator: Loeb, Arthur L. (Arthur Lee), 1923-2002
Extent: 35 boxes
Abstract: The Arthur L. Loeb papers contains personal and educational materials about Design Science during the span of his life and career, 1923-2002.
Language of materials: English
Repository: Rhode Island School of Design Archives
Collection number: SP 7.0

Scope & content

The Arthur L. Loeb papers contains articles, presentations, videos, and other various media and ephemera used to teach his Design Science courses at Harvard University. Included with his teaching materials are also his biographical papers and personal creations. These papers consist of: watercolors, photos, academic papers, lab reports from his time at the Kennecott Copper Company in Lexington, Massachusetts, digital art work, calendars, and posters. Student homework and projects are also included with the collection. This student work also derives from his Design Science courses taught at Harvard University. Several miscellaneous items within the collection are posthumous assignments completed by RISD students in relation to Design Science or Arthur L. Loeb. Correspondences are included but limited as are personal photos. Most of the collection highlights his teaching methods as well as his coursework.

A large collection of built models can be found in the Arthur Loeb Design Science Collection, RISD Nature Lab location. There are approximately 400 models included in the Nature Lab collection. Included with these models are also prints designed and created by Arthur L. Loeb as well as a small collection of calendars, enlarged photos, and student assignments.

In addition to the models and various ephemera, the Arthur Loeb Design Science Collection in the Nature Lab possesses a small library of books from Arthur Loeb's personal collection. This collection includes approximately 600 books on subjects ranging from art, design, fiction, science, and magazine publications. Notable authors and subjects include Ayn Rand, M.C. Escher, and R. Buckminster Fuller. The catalog to this library as well as the books are separate from this finding aid and can be accessed at the Arthur Loeb Design Science Collection.

Removed from the collection were vintage copies of computer programs such as The Geometer's Sketchpad for Macintosh (Key Curriculum Press, 1994), Key CAD (Softkey, IBM), and MAC OS Origami: The Secret Life of Paper (CloudRunner Inc.). Other items removed from the collection include: blank MD2-D Maxwell Mini-Floppy Disks, student course grades and rosters, A Library of Information on Pre-Engineered Steel Buildings (1977), S-STIX Construction Kit, Hoyne Mirro-Tiles, and a collection of Harvard Magazines ranging from the 1970's to the 1990's.

Access Points

Subject Names Subject Names Subject Organizations Subject Topics Subject Topics Occupations

Arrangement

The collection is arranged chronologically and topically in Series One. Series Two-Five were arranged by original order and topically or chronologically when clearly stated.

The records are arranged in five series:

  • I. Arthur Loeb Biographical Information
  • II. Arthur Loeb Visual Materials
  • III. Design Science teaching materials
  • IV. Student work
  • V. Arthur Loeb Design Science Collection, the Nature Lab

Biographical note

Born in Amsterdam, the Netherlands on July 13, 1923, Arthur L. Loeb spent his formative years being educated in the Amsterdam public school system. He became fascinated with geometry and patterns as a child, noting the layout of his schools and the shapes and patterns of his grandfather’s Dutch tiles collection. Hobbies of his were making carefully organized schedules for sport’s leagues and playing piano. During his youth, he studied at the Barlaeus Gymnasium, a prominent secondary school that specializes in classical curriculum and high level pre-university studies. Loeb studied there until he was seventeen when in May of 1940, the Nazi invasion of Amsterdam pushed his family to flee on the last ship to England.

Following their escape from the violence of World War II, the Loeb family settled in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where Arthur began to study Chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania. He graduated in 1943 with a Bachelor of Science. At just twenty years of age, he enrolled in a Master’s program at Harvard University (Boston, Massachusetts) from which he graduated with a Master of Arts in Physics in 1945 and a Doctor of Philosophy in Chemical Physics in 1949. During his time at Harvard, he resumed his piano practices with the instructor Norman Cazden and sang in the Harvard Glee Club.

In the wake of obtaining his doctor’s degree, Loeb was enlisted as a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the Chemistry department. While there, he collaborated with the Ceramics Division of the Department of Metallurgy as well as studying at the New England Conservatory of Music with Marie Poutiatine and Gladys Miller.

At the closure of the war in Europe, a friend of his remaining in Amsterdam sent him a recorder that the Loeb family had left behind when they fled. This began a renewed interest in Renaissance music for Loeb who began a lifelong passion for playing the recorder as well as the viola da gamba, the chamber organ, and the harpsichord. Not only a part-time hobby and interest, Loeb became a serious musician outside of his work in science and immersed himself in the Boston music community. During the early 1950’s, Loeb performed a series of concerts at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in which he utilized instruments within the museum’s collection to perform. He also became Chairman of the Boston Society of Recorded Music and performed, as well as talked, weekly on the Boston radio station WBUR with music conductor Arthur Fiedler.

In addition to his passion for music, Loeb also developed a passion for dance within this time. His interests laid in Scottish country dancing which he later taught courses on at Harvard and even published a collection of dances for the Harvard Scottish Country Dancers. He also performed as a dancer with the Cambridge Court Dancers.

Loeb’s passion for music and dancing is what helped bond his relationship with Charlotte Aarts, a trained lawyer and fellow musician. In 1956, the pair married and eventually translated two books from the Dutch on the De Stijl movement and served together as co-masters to the Harvard Dudley House from 1982 to 1988. The two were also known to perform Baroque and Renaissance era music in their living room.

A year prior to their marriage, Loeb enrolled at the Muzieklyceum in Amsterdam to study the viola de gamba with Hans Bol. Following his return to the states one year later, Loeb rejoined the faculty at MIT in the Electrical Engineering Department. In 1958, he became an Associate Professor and worked primarily with Machine-aided Analysis and Molecular Engineering. He continued his music studies during this time by providing vocals within the Alumni Chorus and the Low Madrigal.

During the 1960’s Loeb dove into his computer research, focusing primarily on crystallography from which he developed computer language capable of storing, communicating, and retrieving spatial concepts and patterns. B.F. Skinner, director of the Committee on Programmed Instruction at Harvard, invited Loeb to be a research participant within the institution. It was during his work here he developed professional relationships with Gyorgy Kepes, M.C. Escher, and R. Buckminster Fuller. Escher and Loeb became lifelong friends and collaborators while Loeb contributed to Fuller’s work by aiding in the writing of Fuller’s masterwork, Synergetics: The Geometry of Thinking.

In 1963, Loeb gave his first studio lecture at the newly minted Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard. As Loeb’s researching intensified, he let go of his position at MIT to enable his studies and began an appointed staff scientist positon at the Kennecott Copper Company laboratory in Lexington, Massachusetts. While at Kennecott, he organized a symposium on structure in 1963 featuring both M.C. Escher and R. Buckminster Fuller. In 1969, he held a similar symposium at Kennecott on the structure and systematics of crystals. Throughout the 60’s, Loeb gave lectures on symmetry all over the world including the Netherlands, England, and Italy and solidified his reputation within the science community. In his musical double-life, Loeb joined the choir at King’s Chapel and performed with the Boston Renaissance Ensemble as well as dabbling in painting studies with Iso Papo.

Loeb began his official career at Harvard in 1970 when he was appointed as an Honorary Associate in Visual and Environmental Studies and instructed the Freshman Seminar, “Structure in Art and Science”. In 1973, he became a full-time faculty member and founded the Design Science Studio as well as serving as the Curator and Head Tutor of the Teaching Collection at the Carpenter Center. The same year, he participated in the Symmetry Festival at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts. While at Harvard, he specialized in teaching two courses: “Introduction to Design Science (VES 175)” and “Synergetics, the Structure of Ordered Space (VES 176)”. Loeb taught at Harvard for 29 years, during which time he created nine courses including ones on art, architecture, and literature (i.e. “Burgundy, the Rise and Fall of the Middle Realm”). It was his goal, as a professor and an academic, the bond the worlds of science, design, and art. In 1988, he fronted the 25th anniversary celebration of the Design Science Studio at Harvard with the Design Science 25 symposium.

Loeb continued to teach until the 90’s and remained a “Renaissance man” through his musical and professional studies for the rest of his life. In 1992, he lectured at the Art and Mathematics Conference at the State University of New York, Albany and at the Cameron University (Lawton, Oklahoma) Diversity Conference in 1993 and 1994. Loeb died on July 19, 2002, survived by his wife and his teaching legacy.

Access & Use

Access to the collection: The use of certain documents and collections may be restricted. Please consult the Archives staff for further details.
Use of the materials: Permission to publish, reproduce, or quote from archival materials must be obtained in writing from the Archives. The researcher assumes full responsibility for use of material and for conformity to all applicable laws, including copyright.
Preferred citation: Arthur L. Loeb papers, Rhode Island School of Design Archives.
Contact information: Rhode Island School of Design Archives
Rhode Island School of Design Archives
Fleet Library at RISD
2 College Street
Providence, RI 02903
Tel: 401-709-5922
Fax: 401-709-5932
email: risdarchives@risd.edu

Administrative Information

ABOUT THE COLLECTION  
Acquisition: Charlotte Loeb (Aarts) donated the Arthur L. Loeb papers to RISD's Nature Lab following his death in 2002.
ABOUT THE FINDING AID  
Author: Finding aid prepared by Alexandra Remy.
Encoding: Finding aid encoded by Alexandra Remy 2017 April 13
Revisions:

2024 January 30

  • Revised by Douglas Doe. Modified dates.
  • Descriptive rules: Finding aid based on Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)

    Additional Information

    Inventory


    Series I. Arthur L. Loeb Biographical Information, 1950-2000
    1 box

    In this series, biographical information and items created by Arthur L. Loeb can be found. Included within this series is a comprehensive collection of his academic writings and research papers as well as photos, biographical materials, lab reports from his time at the Kennecott Copper Company in Lexington, Massachusetts and miscellaneous ephemera. Loeb was a scholar and wrote many orignal academic and scholarly papers based on his own personal research. These academic papers include material on theories within the field of design science, symmetry, computing, and crystallography. There is also a small collection of correspondences available between himself and other academics/former students. A full biography written by Loeb is also included here.

    Container Description Date
    Box 1, Folder 1 Arthur Loeb Biographical Material
    1950-2000
    Box 1, Folder 2 Recommendations
    1956-1993
    Box 1, Folder 3 Correspondences
    1973-1997
    Box 1, Folder 4 Loeb Research Articles
    1950-1959
    Box 1, Folder 5 Loeb Research Articles
    1960-1969
    Box 1, Folder 6 Loeb Research Articles
    1970-1979
    Box 1, Folder 7 Loeb Research Articles
    1980-1989
    Box 1, Folder 8 Loeb Research Articles
    1990-1999
    Box 1, Folder 9 Undated Loeb Writing
    Undated
    Box 1, Folder 10 Reviews
    1970-1979
    Box 1, Folder 11 Ledgemont Laboratory
    1964-1971
    Box 1, Folder 12 AM92 Conference
    1991-1994
    Box 1, Folder 13 Cameron University Diversity Conference
    1993-1994
    Box 1, Folder 14 Symmetry Festival
    February 1973
    Box 15, Folder 15 Philomorphs Group
    1987-1995
    Box 1, Folder 16 Dudley House, Harvard University
    1979-1987
    Box 1, Folder 17 The Golden Mean Exhibition
    1991
    Box 1, Folder 18 Posters
    1981-1989
    Box 1, Folder 19 Miscellaneous #1
    1966-1994
    Box 1, Folder 20 Miscellaneous #2
    1966-1994
    Box 1, Folder 21 Photos
    Undated
    Box 1, Folder 22 Photo Essay
    Undated
    Box 1, Folder 23 Unwrapping the Cube: A Photographic Essay by A. Loeb and C. Todd Stuart
    Undated

    Series II. Arthur L. Loeb Visual Materials, 1954-2008
    19 boxes

    In this series, items created by Arthur L. Loeb can be found. Included within this series is a collection of his watercolor paintings, biographical materials, designs, posters from Loeb's personal collection (as well as some created by him), and various multimedia. Video recording of his workshops as well as some teaching materials and a recording from his memorial service can be found. Multimedia student projects are included.

    Boxes 10-20 contain posters collected by Loeb, several of which are M.C. Escher posters from Escher's 1982 Jerusalem art show. Patterns found in nature and quilt patchwork are represented as well.

    Container Description Date
    Box 2 Video and Media: VHS, Floppy Disk, and DVD
    1982-2008
    Box 3 Calendars
    1980-2000
    Box 4-5 Watercolors
    Undated
    Box 6 Framed Geo Artwork
    Undated
    Box 7 Patterns and Prints
    Undated
    Box 8 Poster Designs
    Undated
    Box 9 Matted Geo Artwork
    Undated
    Box 10 Dragonfly Wing
    Undated
    Box 11-13 The Charles and Evelyn Kramer Gift of M.C. Escher Graphic Work, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Summer 1982
    1982
    Box 14 Pearce Structures Calendar
    1988
    Box 15 Ettore Sottsass Jr., From the End Product to The Product's End, Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Spring 1978
    1978
    Box 16 Margit Echols Patchwork Samples
    Undated
    Box 17 Dymaxion Airocean World, Buckminster Fuller and Soji Sadao
    1954
    Box 18 Plant Hallucinogens
    Undated
    Box 19 Geometric Circle
    Undated
    Box 20 Loeb Print
    Undated

    Series III. Design Science teaching materials, 1965-2007
    9 boxes

    Teaching materials compose most of the items within this series. Loeb retained much of his notes for teaching. This series spans 1970 to 2000 and contains multiple media including ephemera, DVD's, approximately 5,000 35mm slides, a cloth banner, and approximately 150 glass lantern slides. A variety of research articles from other professionals within the design science, architecture, and other various design fields can be found within this portion of the collection as well as research items of personal interest to Loeb. Materials and presentations used directly in his classes are also included. Some of his teaching materials include design patterns, assignment and homework prompts, and class handouts.

    Container Description Date
    Box 21, Folder 1 Visual and Environmental Studies Course Information
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 2 Miscellaneous Teaching Materials #1
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 3 Miscellaneous Teaching Materials #2
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 4 Miscellaneous Teaching Materials #3
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 5 Miscellaneous Teaching Materials #4
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 6 Miscellaneous Teaching Materials #5
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 7 VES 175 and 176 - Design Science (Harvard University) #1
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 8 VES 175 and 176 - Design Science (Harvard University) #2
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 9 "On Painting" Freshman Seminar 1977 (Harvard University)
    1977
    Box 21, Folder 10 Project Synergy
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 11 Renaissance and Teaching
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 12 Bibliography--Design Science
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 13 Agriculture
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 14 Anecdotes and Cartoons
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 15 Architecture
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 16 Art, Tech, and History of Science
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 17 Buckminster Fuller
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 18 Cloth, Clothing, Costumes, and Quilts
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 19 Color and Symmetry
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 20 Computers and Communication
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 21 Escher
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 22 Growth and Biological and Ecological Form
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 23 Hyperspace and Plane Symmetry
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 24 Islamic Art
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 25 Kaleidoscopes and Mirrors
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 26 Models and Toys
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 27 Moduledra
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 28 Netherlands - Modularity
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 29 Polyhedra - Miscellaneous
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 30 Root Blocks
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 31 Shaping Space
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 32 Structures
    1970-2000
    Box 21, Folder 33 Illusions
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 1 "Bob" Morton Bradley
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 2 Stewart Coffin
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 3 H.S.M. Coxeter
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 4 Ole Immanuel Franksen
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 5 Yasushi Kajikawa
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 6 Jay Kappraff
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 7 J.S.W. Lamb
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 8 Lucio Loreto
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 9 Doris Schattschneider
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 10 Lillian Schwartz
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 11 Franz Spaepen
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 12 Duncan R. Stuart
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 13 H.F. Verheyen - Jitterbug Transformations
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 14 Miscellaneous Articles and Research Papers #1
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 15 Miscellaneous Articles and Research Papers #2
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 16 Miscellaneous Articles and Research Papers #3
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 17 Miscellaneous Articles and Research Papers #4
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 18 Miscellaneous Articles and Research Papers #5
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 19 Newspaper Clippings #1
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 20 Newspaper Clippings #2
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 21 Education and Environmental Science Journals
    1970-2000
    Box 22, Folder 22 Ancestry Computing
    1983-1986
    Box 22, Folder 23 Reflections on Space
    1983-1987
    Box 22, Folder 24 Synergetica
    1985-1986
    Box 22, Folder 25 Trimtab Bulletin
    1986-1987
    Box 23, Folder 1 Student Slides
    1981-1986
    Box 23, Folder 2 Escher
    1985
    Box 23, Folder 3 Studio Overviews
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 4 Loeb Exhibits
    1972
    Box 23, Folder 5 Photos - Netherlands
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 6 Illustrations
    1979-1981
    Box 23, Folder 7 Ellipsoid Thermal Crystal
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 8 Cube Transformation
    1976-1978
    Box 23, Folder 9 Golden Section
    1980-1984
    Box 23, Folder 10 Golden Section
    1977-1987
    Box 23, Folder 11 Loeb Symmetry Graphics
    1965-1970
    Box 23, Folder 12 Transformations
    1977-1985
    Box 23, Folder 13 Miscellaneous #1
    1980-1986
    Box 23, Folder 14 Miscellaneous #2
    1976-1985
    Box 23, Folder 15 Miscellaneous #3
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 16 Leonard Diggins
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 17 Puzzles and Games
    1985-1986
    Box 23, Folder 18 Saidel Eggs
    1984
    Box 23, Folder 19 Bodden/Spider
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 20 McQueston Computer Graphics
    1984
    Box 23, Folder 21 Needlepoint, Quilts, and Textiles
    1984-1985
    Box 23, Folder 22 Furniture
    1979-1984
    Box 23, Folder 23 Playgrounds
    1982-1987
    Box 23, Folder 24 Architecture
    1986
    Box 23, Folder 25 Kites
    1981-1984
    Box 23, Folder 26 Keltner/Parquet
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 27 Newton Ho
    1986
    Box 23, Folder 28 Vector Equilibrium Synergy
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 29 Kahn
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 30 Jitterbug
    1979
    Box 23, Folder 31 Dubois
    1977
    Box 23, Folder 32 Starr
    1985
    Box 23, Folder 33 Oakley
    1984
    Box 23, Folder 34 Tensegrity
    1984-1986
    Box 23, Folder 35 Loeb Exhibit
    1980-1984
    Box 23, Folder 36 Anamorphosis
    1980
    Box 23, Folder 37 Design Science Lecture - Oklahoma, April 24, 1992
    1992
    Box 23, Folder 38 September and October 1966
    1966
    Box 23, Folder 39 Bloembergen
    1985
    Box 23, Folder 40 Moduledra
    1980-1984
    Box 23, Folder 41 Programmed Instruction
    Undated
    Box 23, Folder 42 Design Science 25 - Magnus Snorrason 1988
    1988
    Box 23, Folder 43 Miscellaneous #4
    1966-1988
    Box 24, Folder 1 Spirals
    1980
    Box 24, Folder 2 Swirnoff
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 3 Alderman/Loeb
    1983
    Box 24, Folder 4 Hyper Solids
    1975-1988
    Box 24, Folder 5 Brisson
    1976
    Box 24, Folder 6 John Lesseron
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 7 Oja
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 8 Vedder Wright
    1988
    Box 24, Folder 9 Diggins
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 10 Loeb and Varmey
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 11 Mallinson
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 12 Siegel
    1988
    Box 24, Folder 13 Gluek Stellations
    1988
    Box 24, Folder 14 Masunaga
    1986
    Box 24, Folder 15 Polyhedra
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 16 Stella October 1986
    1986
    Box 24, Folder 17 Richardson
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 18 Lampros
    1984
    Box 24, Folder 19 Martin
    1981
    Box 24, Folder 20 Yhuralde
    1976
    Box 24, Folder 21 Huebler Conceptual Art
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 22 Loeb Slide Show
    1974-1975
    Box 24, Folder 23 Kindshita
    1981
    Box 24, Folder 24 Historic Graphs
    1975-1988
    Box 24, Folder 25 Kinship
    1979
    Box 24, Folder 26 Color Symmetry
    1971-1972
    Box 24, Folder 27 23 Loeb
    1979
    Box 24, Folder 28 Symmetry Groups
    1965-1970
    Box 24, Folder 29 Haughten and Loeb
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 30 Loeb Spring 1993
    1993
    Box 24, Folder 31 Platonic/Archimed.
    1978
    Box 24, Folder 32 Schlegel
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 33 Spalding
    1976-1978
    Box 24, Folder 34 Edmondson
    1980
    Box 24, Folder 35 Yoko Kawai/Hiroki Sugiyama
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 36 Judd
    1976
    Box 24, Folder 37 Paul Tange
    1980
    Box 24, Folder 38 Korman Modules
    1980
    Box 24, Folder 39 Ribbon Groups
    1986
    Box 24, Folder 40 Domes
    1980
    Box 24, Folder 41 Symmetry Examples
    1974-1986
    Box 24, Folder 42 Spheres Packings
    1985
    Box 24, Folder 43 Fractals
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 44 Architectural Analysis
    1986
    Box 24, Folder 45 Miscellaneous #5
    1987-1991
    Box 24, Folder 46 Polyhedral Coordinate
    1981
    Box 24, Folder 47 Historic Illustrations
    1986
    Box 24, Folder 48 Escher
    1985
    Box 24, Folder 49 Symmetry in the Plane
    1977-1985
    Box 24, Folder 50 Color Symmetry
    1975-1988
    Box 24, Folder 51 Feldman
    1976-1983
    Box 24, Folder 52 Math Equation
    1974
    Box 24, Folder 53 Dirichlet
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 54 Portfolio
    1985
    Box 24, Folder 55 Synergetics, Yasuhiro Akie
    Undated
    Box 24, Folder 56 Becky
    1980-1988
    Box 24, Folder 57 Randolph
    1985
    Box 24, Folder 58 130r Spring 1967, Munari, Slide Projecy
    1967
    Box 25-26 Lantern Slides
    Undated
    Box 27 Design Science cloth banner
    Undated
    Box 28 Visual, Print, Painting (Joseph D. Clinton)
    2007
    Box 29 Color and Symmetry Exhibition
    Undated

    Series IV. Student Work, 1970-2000
    6 boxes

    Student materials comprise Series IV. Assignment prompts accompany some of the finished products. Final papers and projects in various formats are provided. Paintings, papers, computer coding and programs, as well as a handmade and designed refugee tent is presented here. Items here range predominantly from 1970 to 2000. Some items are of unknown authorship.

    Container Description Date
    Box 30, Folder 1 Student Assignments #1
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 2 Student Assignments #2
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 3 Student Assignments #3
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 4 Student Assignments #4
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 5 Student Assignments #5
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 6 Student Assignments #6
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 7 Student Assignments #7
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 8 Student Assignments #8
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 8 Student Assignments #8
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 9 Student Assignments #9
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 10 Student Assignments #10
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 11 Student Assignments #11
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 12 Student Assignments #12
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 13 Student Assignments #13
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 14 Student Assignments #14
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 15 Student Assignments #15
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 16 Student Assignments #16
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 17 Open Studio Questionaires
    1988
    Box 30, Folder 18 Jory Bell
    1990
    Box 30, Folder 19 Randy Bishop
    1989
    Box 30, Folder 20 Dynamic Polyhedral Transformations - Andrew Spalding
    1978
    Box 30, Folder 21 Miguel Rudno VES 176
    1970-2000
    Box 30, Folder 22 Freshman Seminar, "Anamorphic Art", S. Weissman
    1970-2000
    Box 31 Student Projects #1
    1970-2000
    Box 32 Student Projects #2
    1970-2000
    Box 33 Student Projects #3
    1970-2000
    Box 34 Student Projects (Oversized Materials)
    1970-2000
    Box 35 Student Project: Refugee Tent
    1970-2000

    Series V. Arthur Loeb Design Science Collection, the Nature Lab, 1970-2000
    72 boxes

    Series V contains models (student created as well as Loeb created), prints, calendars, and student assignments. These items are separate of the main collection and reside in the Arthur Loeb Design Science Collection at the Nature Lab. Over 400 models and 600 books are part of this portion of the collection. The books are part of Arthur Loeb's personal library which is separate from this collection.

    Container Description Date
    Box 1-57 Models
    1970-2000
    Drawer 1-15 Prints
    1970-2000
    Drawer A-J Calendars, Prints, and Student Work
    1970-2000