
Phoenix, 1950’s


From DeGrazia’s Midnight Fantasies: “the Lone Navajo Squaw”
DeGrazia Gallery, Tucson, Arizona

Gunsight Butte, Lake Powell

Phoenix at night


Phoenix, 1950’s


From DeGrazia’s Midnight Fantasies: “the Lone Navajo Squaw”
DeGrazia Gallery, Tucson, Arizona

Gunsight Butte, Lake Powell

Phoenix at night





El Alcazar, Sevilla

El Alcazar, Sevilla


Toledo


Patio of the Lions gallery at the Alhambra in Granada

Cologne Cathedral, Cologne

Atypisches Museum Berlin. Erected in 1851 opposite Charlottenburg Palace to house King Friedrich Wilhelm IV’s Imperial Guard, this building and its mirror image twin across the avenue have served the Staatlichen Museen PreuBishcher Kulturbesitz as museums since 1967 and 1960 respectively.
Designed by Friedrich August Stuhler, the buildings with small round temples sat on their flat roofs are important examples of 19th century city architecture despite extensive damage suffered during the last war. In our case, a Marshall built to enable the horses of the Imperial Guard adjoins the main building. The long hall with vaulted ceiling is divided into three halves by iron columns that were cast in a Berlin foundry around 1858.

Stuttgart, Germany


Oberammergau, Germany

Frankfurt Airport

Lago di Lugano, Santa Margherita 1915

Lugano, Monte San Salvatore




Otto Baumberger Plakat, Lugano 1924


Vintage postcard of the Rijks Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands

The Hague

Ghent

Scheveningen – The Pier, Photo: Jan Heuff

Volendam

Enkhuizen

Freisland

Vintage postcard from 1906


The theme of the 1968 World’s Fair HemisFair is “the Confluence of Civilization in the Americas” – a flowing together of the combined civilization of six continents. This is an over-all view of the fair in downtown San Antonio.

The General Electric Pavilion. In a futuristic building, General Electric presents the story of electrical living in the Southwest from the time the first lights blazed in the San Antonio Opera House to the present.

Eastman KodakPavilion. Visitors to the Eastman Kodak Pavilion are introduced to the complexities and delights of film and filmcraft in all its many forms.


The Alamo
Erected in 1718, as a church and fortress, it became the symbol of Texas independence. During the Texas-Mexican Independence War in 1836, it was defended and lost to the last Texan. Soon “Remember the Alamo” became synonymous with Texas independence.


Abbey Road
London

London, 1973

London, 1978



Parliament Square, London 1956

St Paul’s Cathedral, 1966


The entrance to the railroad exhibit at the New York World’s Fair 1939 appears very much like a glorified and modernistic roundhouse for locomotives.The Rotunda above contains 25,000 square feet of floor space leading to a circular theme hall 180 feet in diameter surmounted by a dome approximately eight stories in height. Sponsored by the Eastern Presidents Conference of the railroads, the exhibit includes a building nearly a quarter of a mile long, an outdoor exposition including nearly a mile of track, a colorful pageant telling the history of American railroads and the largest working miniature railroad ever constructed. The building contains 110,000 square feet of floor space and is the largest at the Fair.

The Electrical Products Building, New York World’s Fair is a rainbow of colors glowing across the World of Tomorrow. The Electrical Building is in the “Blue Sector” with a mural hint of ‘Wonders’ displayed behind its portals. The oddly shaped pylon at the left is an outstanding feature of the building. Architects: Walker and Gillette.

The Hall of Pharmacy at the New York World’s Fair 1939 shown in the center of this photograph, which has been taken over by contract by The Show Globe, Inc., presents the entire story of research, development, manufacture and distribution of drugs and pharmaceutical products. The building, built by the Fair Corporation, occupies one of the most prominent sites in the Exposition grounds, being close to the Theme Center, the 200 foot Perisphere and 700 foot Trylon, partly shown at the extreme left of the photograph. Architects: Pleasants Pennington, G. Lyman Paine, Jr. and I. Woodner-Silverman.
The 1939 New York World’s Fair took place in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens, New York. Many countries participated and over 44 million people attended over two seasons. It was based on the future with an emphasis on the ‘world of tomorrow’.

Selknam Hunters
Indigenous people of Patagonia (Chile and Argentina).

Mural Escenografico – La Boca
Martin Correa Urquiza, photographer

This is a Panagra, Jet Sky Postcard from the 1960’s.


Selk’nam family with guanaco pelts
Tierra del Fuego, Argentina

Juaquin Torres GarcĂa
Universalismo Constructivo, 1944
Uruguayan-Spanish artist, theorist, and author, renowned for his international impact in the modern art world. Born in Montevideo, Uruguay, his family moved to Catalonia, Spain, where his artistic journey began.
Colleccion MALBA, Buenos Aires, Argentina


Vina Del Mar, 1967

Santiago, 1986


Partial view of the city located at the Llanquihue lake’s shore. At the back the Calbuco Volcano.


Petrohue, Chile

Torres del Paine National Park
Region of Magellan and Chilean Antarctica, Chile

Lago Grey Hotel, Patagonia, Chile
