
Pulitzer Fountain, Grand Army Plaza, Fifth Avenue between East Fifty-Eighth Street and East Fifty-Ninth Street, Looking toward the General Motors Building
No image available.
Bookmark (persistent url): https://dac-collection.wesleyan.edu/objects-1/info/13696
Pulitzer Fountain, Grand Army Plaza, Fifth Avenue between East Fifty-Eighth Street and East Fifty-Ninth Street, Looking toward the General Motors Building
197820th century
567 x 452 mm (22.3 x 17.8 in.)
Philip Trager, American, b. born 1935
- architecture - Art or science of designing and building structures, especially habitable structures, in accordance with principles determined by aesthetic and practical or material considerations. Refers also to the structures created. [November 1994 related term added. October 1990 alternate term added.]
- Connecticut artists
- fountains - Use for structures with apertures designed to allow water to spout or flow periodically or continuously, as for amenity or public access. [March 1995 scope note added; related term added.]
- New York City - TGN 7007567 (“New York” preferred, “New York City” display; retained “City” for clarity)
- Northeastern United States - TGN 4011496 (general region): The term typically refers to New England and the northern Atlantic seaboard, including Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey.
- Wesleyan University alumni artists
- image Dimensions: 567 x 452 mm (22.3 x 17.8 in.)
No open access image available
Philip Trager, American, b. born 1935 . Pulitzer Fountain, Grand Army Plaza, Fifth Avenue between East Fifty-Eighth Street and East Fifty-Ninth Street, Looking toward the General Motors Building, 1978. From Philip Trager: New York. Platinum print. image : 567 x 452 mm (22.3 x 17.8 in.). Sheet : 671 x 558 mm (26.4 x 22 in.). DAC accession number 2008.15.2. Gift of Ina and Philip S. Trager (BA Wesleyan 1956, DFA 2008), 2008.
Your search criteria: Objects is "Pulitzer Fountain, Grand Army Plaza, Fifth Avenue between East Fifty-Eighth Street and East Fifty-Ninth Street, Looking toward the General Motors Building".
View current selection of records as: