20:
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of
Dennison & Hirons was central to the founding and running of the school. Hirons had attended the Paris school from 1904 through 1909; co-founded BAID in 1916; designed the BAID building in 1928 (won through a competition, in the manner of Beaux-Arts); and served as president of the Society of
153:
BAID architectural competitions were published across the country, administered through university architecture schools or independent studios, and the entries all graded by jury at once. The highest number of entries received was in the 1929–1930 year, when 9500 entries came into New York City for
437:
Lloyd Warren, architect, was found dead yesterday morning in an areaway below his bedroom at 1 West
Sixtyfourth Street. It is believed that he fell accidentally while opening the window of his apartment, which is on the eighth floor. Mr. Warren who was founder of the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design,
95:
deeded over a building at 126 East 75th Street to the newly created BAID. Courses began on
September 18, 1916 in three departments. The architecture department was associated with a committee from the Society; the sculpture department with a committee from the National Sculpture Society; and the
70:
From its beginning in 1894, the
Society of Beaux-Arts Architects had been interested in improving architectural education in the U.S.. It took on the task of developing standard architectural "programmes" for design problems to be given as assignments in architecture schools and in independent
134:(graduate of University of Michigan). His design "An airport for a large city" drew interest among persons concerned with the future of commercial aviation, it depicted a scheme for dispatching and receiving commercial planes.
75:
were participating. By 1916 the burden of providing problem statements and jurying the work from an increasing number of schools and ateliers exceeded the capacity of the
Society, so it established BAID to carry on this work.
71:
ateliers. The intent was to raise performance standards, but the effect also was to standardize the way architecture was taught all across the United States. By 1900, most
American architecture schools and many independent
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377:
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The school tended to be populated by students who were either immigrants or first-generation
Americans. They often came from working-class backgrounds, and their training was towards getting a union job in the
420:"Sleep-Walk Plunge Kills Lloyd Warren; Famous Architect Falls From His Sixth-Floor Apartment in Early Morning. Suicide Theory Discarded. Victim Had Suffered From Somnambulism. Created BeauxArts Institute"
461:
This
Institute that he founded less than a decade ago is and will remain, in the opinion of its countless friends, the very best monument that could be erected to Lloyd Warren's memory. ...
157:
BAID also had on-site instruction and classrooms, with large sculpture studios open long hours and into the evenings for the convenience of working students and part-time teachers.
123:. He was instrumental in getting top figures from the sculptural and architectural fields to teach at BAID, and serve on competition panels, for the sake of the profession.
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Among sculpture professionals, the foundation of BAID ensured a supply of competent decorative sculptors, and allowed the members of the
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for the training of
American architects, sculptors and mural painters consistent with the educational agenda of the French
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architectural competition was Carl Conrad Franz
Kressbach, a student at the Graduate School of Architecture at
884:
The Study of Architectural Design: With Special Reference to the Program of the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design
765:
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and a brother of Whitney Warren, the architect, ... Subject to Sleep-Walking. Not a Suicide, Says Doctor.
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141:, reflecting a change of focus away from European traditions. In 1995 it was again renamed the
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by Angie Clifton, updated by Adam Ronan. Published 2009 North Carolina Architects and Builders
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165:, rather than becoming a fine arts sculptor. Many of these students also attended the
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500:"Wins Beaux Arts Award; C.C.F. Kressbach, Harvard Student, Designs Airport Buildings"
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National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan from 14th to 59th Streets
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List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan from 14th to 59th Streets
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Mantle Fielding's Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers
804:
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40:
517:
353:
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237:
222:
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716:
350:, muralist, painter, sculptor, BAID medalist 1935-1936 for mural design
901:
New York 1930: Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars
897:
Stern, Robert A. M.; Gilmartin, Patrick; Mellins, Thomas (1987).
234:, sculptor; student (1916–1920) and instructor (1931–32; 1940–41)
35:) was an art and architectural school at 304 East 44th Street in
943:
Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University
861:
Public Sculpture and the Civic Ideal in New York City: 1890-1930
308:, sculptor of mostly Louisiana political and business figures
48:
293:
246:, Colonial Revival domestic architect, Louisville, Kentucky
16:
Former art and architectural school in Manhattan, New York
747:
877:, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., 1985
83:
to position themselves as fine artists in comparison.
896:
466:
898:
476:, The Pencil Points Press, Inc., New York 1926 p 2
939:Held by the Department of Drawings & Archives
786:Guide to the Albert Stewart Photograph Collection
982:
1001:New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan
390:
139:National Institute for Architectural Education
137:In 1956 the Institute changed its name to the
108:Beaux-Arts Architects from 1937 through 1939.
39:, in New York City. It was founded in 1916 by
33:National Institute for Architectural Education
1006:Universities and colleges established in 1916
557:, Apollo Books, Poughkeepsie, New York, 1988
863:, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1989
213:, sculptor, attended BAID from 1917 to 1927
96:mural department with a committee from the
886:, Pencil Points Press Inc., New York, 1926
314:, painter, attended BAID from 1940 to 1942
766:Corrado Parducci interview, 1975 Mar. 17
18:
820:
126:In 1927 the first winner of the annual
983:
414:
412:
362:, architect, Atelier near Los Angeles
332:, sculptor and children's book author
264:, student and instructor c. 1920-1926
991:1916 establishments in New York City
935:Edgar A. Josselyn papers, circa 1889
583:. McGraw-Hill Professional. 2003. "
409:
13:
891:Architectural Sculpture in America
875:Sculpture and the Federal Triangle
870:, Crown Publishers, New York, 1948
853:
673:
14:
1022:
928:
831:University of Southern California
821:Bengali, Shashank (Spring 2004).
581:American Art: History and Culture
474:The Study of Architectural Design
181:, sculptor, entered BAID in 1915
172:
811:. Retrieved on January 27, 2009.
794:. Retrieved on January 27, 2009.
775:. Retrieved on January 27, 2009.
764:Barrie, Dennis (conducted by). "
755:. Retrieved on January 27, 2009.
725:. Retrieved on January 26, 2009.
670:. Retrieved on January 27, 2009.
653:. Retrieved on January 27, 2009.
636:. Retrieved on January 26, 2009.
406:. Retrieved on January 26, 2009.
65:Society of Beaux-Arts Architects
868:Contemporary American Sculpture
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709:
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656:
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620:
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568:Contemporary American Sculpture
560:
506:. December 24, 1927. p. 8.
282:, sculptor, attended circa 1928
240:, sculptor, attended circa 1922
207:, sculptor, attended circa 1926
167:Art Students League of New York
547:
535:
510:
492:
479:
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47:. The building is now home to
29:Beaux-Arts Institute of Design
1:
753:New Mexico Tourism Department
628:Gross, Chaim, b. 1904 d. 1991
383:
148:
996:Art schools in New York City
566:National Sculpture Society,
487:The American Magazine of Art
7:
366:
302:, architect, Atelier Denver
10:
1027:
770:Archives of American Art,
598:"Vincent Glinsky Homepage"
185:Beniamino Benvenuto Bufano
93:National Sculpture Society
86:
81:National Sculpture Society
58:
889:Kvaran, Einar Einarsson,
451:"Tribute to Lloyd Warren"
356:, sculptor, attended 1932
225:, sculptor, professor at
98:Society of Mural Painters
893:, unpublished manuscript
823:"Williams the Conqueror"
772:Smithsonian Institution
633:Smithsonian Institution
105:Frederic Charles Hirons
827:Trojan Family Magazine
668:The Hensche Foundation
489:for November 1916, the
179:Edmond Romulus Amateis
24:
1011:Turtle Bay, Manhattan
967:40.75068°N 73.97081°W
905:. New York: Rizzoli.
544:, December 1940, p. 8
63:BAID grew out of the
37:Turtle Bay, Manhattan
22:
859:Bogart, Michele H.,
348:Robert Edward Weaver
286:Ellamae Ellis League
200:Pasadena, California
111:Another founder was
45:École des Beaux-Arts
23:304 East 44th Street
972:40.75068; -73.97081
963: /
866:Brummé, C. Ludwig,
472:Herbeson, John F.,
809:Albert Wein Estate
791:Claremont Colleges
741:2009-02-18 at the
608:on 31 January 2013
522:Van Alen Institute
504:The New York Times
428:. October 26, 1922
425:The New York Times
398:Places of Interest
219:, church architect
143:Van Alen Institute
132:Harvard University
121:Warren and Wetmore
51:'s mission to the
25:
912:978-0-8478-3096-1
881:Harbeson, John F.
697:Joseph Kiselewski
680:Herbert B. Hunter
553:Opitz, Glenn B.,
288:, architect from
274:Joseph Kiselewski
268:Herbert B. Hunter
115:, the brother of
31:(BAID, later the
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873:Gurney, George,
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833:. Archived from
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604:. Archived from
602:www.omnidisc.com
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570:, New York, 1929
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318:Corrado Parducci
306:Arthur C. Morgan
217:Harold H. Fisher
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330:Louis Slobodkin
324:David K. Rubins
262:Oswald Hoepfner
244:Stratton Hammon
232:Vincent Glinsky
227:Pratt Institute
211:Mitchell Fields
198:, architect in
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163:building trades
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117:Whitney Warren
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839:. Retrieved
835:the original
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722:Ibram Lassaw
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606:the original
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296:from Georgia
280:Ibram Lassaw
270:, architect.
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113:Lloyd Warren
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41:Lloyd Warren
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970: /
841:January 27,
336:Cesare Stea
238:Chaim Gross
223:Paul Fjelde
196:Rose Connor
985:Categories
958:73°58′15″W
955:40°45′02″N
702:2023-01-31
527:5 February
432:2010-07-25
403:Turtle Bay
384:References
344:, sculptor
338:, sculptor
326:, sculptor
320:, sculptor
276:, sculptor
252:, sculptor
192:, sculptor
149:Activities
103:Architect
805:Biography
518:"History"
258:, painter
154:judging.
921:13860977
739:Archived
459:. 1922.
367:See also
73:ateliers
87:History
59:Origins
919:
909:
751:]
717:Resume
651:CRA/LA
612:22 May
49:Egypt
917:OCLC
907:ISBN
843:2009
614:2022
529:2019
294:FAIA
91:The
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