Box 1
Contains 38 Results:
Design at Purdue - 56 Slides, 1965 - 1970
Slides of various designs and miscellaneous items by Purdue students and Al Gowan, 1965-1970.
Biographics: a film by Al Gowan and Victor Papanek, 1968
DVD; footage of biological specimens, sliced in a linear fashion by Dr. Samuel N. Postlethwait, Professor in the Purdue Biology Department at the time; film then spliced and set to a jazz soundtrack by Gowan and Papanek, to create a virtual trip through a three dimensional object. They were later invited to the International Design Conference in Aspen, Colorado to show the film.
Logo for Krannert School of Industrial Management, 1968
First Purdue seal design by Bruce Rogers, 1893
Includes an image on 19th Commencement program, June 7, 1893.
Second Purdue seal design by Bruce Rogers, 1894
Image on front page of October 1894 Exponent, volume 6, no. 1.
Third Purdue seal by Miss Abby Phelps Lytle, 1895
Iimage on 1895 Commencement program.
Fourth Purdue seal design by Mrs. Marion Woodbury, 1909
Image on program for 4-H Round-up.
Purdue seal, 1924
Image on Purdue semi-centennial, Alumni Record.
Staff Photo by Vellinger, Dick. Student Rights Aired. The Journal and Courier, p. unknown , May 23, 1968
A black and white photograph of Purdue students at the "Hello Walk" rally.]
Centennial Seal. Purdue University Summer Times, p. 1 , August 2, 1968
Image of the seal and caption in left front corner of newsletter.
Photograph, with caption, Students Undo Damage. The Journal and Courier, p. unknown, circa 1968
Photograph, by Frank Keegan, with caption, Marauders Pose A Question. Exponent, p. unknown, undated
Vandalism at art and design house.
Black and white photograph of Al Gowan, 1969
Black and white photographs with captions, photographer not identified. Discrimination Against Art Students? The Purdue Exponent, p. 11, March 7, 1969
Editorial. Displaced Students. The Purdue Exponent, p. 10 , March 7, 1969
Includes photograph by Dick Fee of art students in "cramped space."
Thornburg, Ron. Student Protestors Granted Amnesty After 41 Arrests. The Purdue Exponent, pp. 1 - 2 , April 22, 1969
Includes photograph of Purdue students in front of president's office.
Original pen and ink 'finished art' for the Krannert School logo, 1968
Various slides of Purdue seal and board showing proper placement of seal alongside the Exponent title, circa 1968
Image of the first Purdue seal designed by Bruce Rogers, along with a copy of the cover of the Annual Register of 1890-91 on which it appeared, 1890
Image of the second design, also drawn by Rogers, which first appeared on the cover of the Exponent’s October 1, 1894
Image of the fourth design, speculated to have been designed by engineering students, which was a bronze casting not suitable for reproduction, 1905
Image of fifth design; working from a sketch by Mrs. Marion Woodbury, his daughter, Charles H. Benjamin, Dean of Engineering designed this design. , 1909
The shield was reduced in size and the symbols reduced to three. The griffin now held a Roman lamp of learning. The design was used for the next sixty years.
Image of sixth variation; appeared in the Semi-Centennial Alumni Record of , 1924
This variation separates the griffin, the shield, and the banner from their positions on the Benjamin version. The design has appeared in Memorial Union publications from time to time. The designer is unknown.
Image and negative of seventh design by Bruce Rogers, 1947
Includes a copy of the cover of the Bulletin of Purdue University, Catalogue Number for the Sessions of 1946 - 1947 and Purdue University stationery on which the seventh design appears.
Image of the eighth variation appears on a supplemental sheet of seal designs, circa 1947
Commissioned by Robert W. Babcock, it was an attempt to simplify the Benjamin design. It appears in the March 1947 issue of Campus Copy, included among the papers in this folder. After seeking faculty opinion, the University continued to use the Benjamin seal instead.