Cornell University Library Guides Subjects: Art and Architecture

Search:
  |  Return to Homepage
Art and Architecture resources

AAP Seminars and Events 2008 Fall
by Fine Arts Reference - last updated on Oct 13th, 2009
A guide to resources about seminars and events in the college of Architecture, Art, and Planning.
AAP Seminars and Events 2008 Spring
by Karen Brummund - last updated on Oct 09th, 2009
A guide to resources about seminars and events in the college of Architecture, Art, and Planning.
AAP Seminars and Events 2009 Spring
by Fine Arts Reference - last updated on Oct 09th, 2009
A guide to resources about seminars and events in the college of Architecture, Art, and Planning.
Bauhaus
by Fine Arts Reference - last updated on Sep 28th, 2009
A guide to resources about Bauhaus, a school of design established by Walter Gropius in Weimar in 1919 , best known for its designs of objects based on functionalism and simplicity.
Design & Environmental Analysis
by Mann Library Reference Desk - last updated on Jul 16th, 2009
Subject guide for Design and Environmental Analysis at Mann Library
Earth Art
by Fine Arts Reference - last updated on Sep 28th, 2009
Guide to resources on Earth Art: "Land art, Earthworks, or Earth art is an art movement which emerged in the United States in the late 1960s and early 1970s, in which landscape and the work of art are inextricably linked".
Finding images at Cornell
by Susette Newberry, Kaila Bussert - last updated on Nov 13th, 2009
Quick overview of searching for images in the databases Cornell University Library has built or licenses.
Jean Nouvel
by Fine Arts Reference - last updated on Sep 28th, 2009
A guide to resources regarding French architect Jean Nouvel who won the 2008 Pritzker Prize for his complete works.
MEDVL 1101-101: Questioning Spanish Medieval Art 700-1492
by Virginia Cole - last updated on Sep 28th, 2009
A library research guide to Aspects of Medieval Culture
Outsider Art
by Fine Arts Reference - last updated on Sep 28th, 2009
A guide to resources about "Outsider art", a term used since the 1940s to describe art produced ‘outside’ the normal fine art tradition.


 

Loading content...