Tuesday, February 22, 2022

INDIANA UNIVERSITY OPENS THE MIES VAN DER ROHE BUILDING OF ITS ESKENAZI SCHOOL OF ART, ARCHITECTURE + DESIGN Rediscovered Design by Mies, Realized After 70 Years, Welcomes Faculty and Students at Start of Spring 2022 Semester Open House and Reception Scheduled for April 8, 2022 Exterior view of the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, a Mies van der Rohe Design, on the campus of Indiana University Bloomington. © Hadley Fruits DOWNLOAD PRESS MATERIALS BLOOMINGTON, IN, February 22, 2022 — Peg Faimon, Dean of Indiana University’s Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, today announced that the School’s Mies van der Rohe building has opened to students, faculty, and the public for the spring semester. The building, which serves as a shared facility for the School, is the realization of a recently rediscovered 1952 design that Mies created for the Bloomington campus. The design has been sensitively adapted for contemporary use by the architectural team of Thomas Phifer and Partners. Lecture, workshop, student collaboration, administrative and office program spaces are included. Originally commissioned for an IU chapter of the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, which subsequently abandoned the project, the Mies design was all but forgotten for some sixty years. It re-emerged in 2013 when Sidney Eskenazi, a member of the former chapter, informed IU’s then-President Michael A. McRobbie of the existence of Mies’s drawings for the building. Following a trail of rediscovery, IU found documentation of the project in the archives of the Art Institute of Chicago and New York’s Museum of Modern Art. In 2019, IU announced that it would realize the 10,000-square-foot, two-story building, paying for construction with a portion of a $20 million donation from Sidney and Lois Eskenazi. The 60-foot-wide, 140-foot-long building is made principally of thin, white-painted steel and expansive glass in panes measuring 10 feet square, with select gray limestone and white epoxy terrazzo. Floor-to-ceiling windows wrap around the entire second story, which features a central exterior square atrium, giving the impression of transparency throughout the building. Much of the lower level is open to the air, with the second or main story elegantly elevated above the ground plane. Architecturally, the building has a strong relationship to both the contemporaneous Farnsworth House and the massing and form of many of Mies’s early concepts for buildings at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Select furnishings designed by Mies and Florence Knoll, respectively, have been chosen to complement the building’s design and era. Peg Faimon said, “We are thrilled to mark the opening of the Mies Building, which will enable faculty and students of all our School’s programs to come together and collaborate. Just as important, this magnificent building shows who we are, representing the excellence to which we are committed. There can be no greater inspiration for us than to learn and work in a masterpiece by this titan of twentieth-century architecture. Let us hope that it will be a lasting monument to the power of collaborations and connections of all kinds—artistic, creative, intellectual and, above all, human.” To celebrate the realization of the building, the Eskenazi School will hold a public open house and reception on April 8, 2022. There will also be an invitation-only panel discussion on the background and design of the building and the history of Mies’s work in Indiana. Moderated by Adam Thies, Indiana University Associate Vice President, Capital Planning & Facilities, the panel will include Steve Dayton, Project Architect, Thomas Phifer and Partners; Ron Johnson, Structural Engineer, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM); and Edward Windhorst, Mies van der Rohe’s biographer. Thomas Phifer and Partners is also the architect for IU’s new Ferguson International Center, currently under construction directly across North Eagleson Avenue from the Mies building of the Eskenazi School.

INDIANA UNIVERSITY OPENS THE MIES VAN DER ROHE BUILDING OF ITS ESKENAZI SCHOOL OF ART, ARCHITECTURE + DESIGN

 

Rediscovered Design by Mies, Realized After 70 Years, Welcomes Faculty and Students at Start of Spring 2022 Semester

 

Open House and Reception Scheduled for April 8, 2022

 



Exterior view of the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, a Mies van der Rohe Design,

on the campus of Indiana University Bloomington. © Hadley Fruits

 

 

BLOOMINGTON, IN, February 22, 2022 — Peg Faimon, Dean of Indiana University’s Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, today announced that the School’s Mies van der Rohe building has opened to students, faculty, and the public for the spring semester. The building, which serves as a shared facility for the School, is the realization of a recently rediscovered 1952 design that Mies created for the Bloomington campus. The design has been sensitively adapted for contemporary use by the architectural team of Thomas Phifer and Partners. Lecture, workshop, student collaboration, administrative and office program spaces are included.

 

Originally commissioned for an IU chapter of the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, which subsequently abandoned the project, the Mies design was all but forgotten for some sixty years. It re-emerged in 2013 when Sidney Eskenazi, a member of the former chapter, informed IU’s then-President Michael A. McRobbie of the existence of Mies’s drawings for the building. Following a trail of rediscovery, IU found documentation of the project in the archives of the Art Institute of Chicago and New York’s Museum of Modern Art. In 2019, IU announced that it would realize the 10,000-square-foot, two-story building, paying for construction with a portion of a $20 million donation from Sidney and Lois Eskenazi.

 

The 60-foot-wide, 140-foot-long building is made principally of thin, white-painted steel and expansive glass in panes measuring 10 feet square, with select gray limestone and white epoxy terrazzo. Floor-to-ceiling windows wrap around the entire second story, which features a central exterior square atrium, giving the impression of transparency throughout the building. Much of the lower level is open to the air, with the second or main story elegantly elevated above the ground plane. Architecturally, the building has a strong relationship to both the contemporaneous Farnsworth House and the massing and form of many of Mies’s early concepts for buildings at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Select furnishings designed by Mies and Florence Knoll, respectively, have been chosen to complement the building’s design and era.

 

Peg Faimon said, “We are thrilled to mark the opening of the Mies Building, which will enable faculty and students of all our School’s programs to come together and collaborate. Just as important, this magnificent building shows who we are, representing the excellence to which we are committed. There can be no greater inspiration for us than to learn and work in a masterpiece by this titan of twentieth-century architecture. Let us hope that it will be a lasting monument to the power of collaborations and connections of all kinds—artistic, creative, intellectual and, above all, human.

 

To celebrate the realization of the building, the Eskenazi School will hold a public open house and reception on April 8, 2022. There will also be an invitation-only panel discussion on the background and design of the building and the history of Mies’s work in Indiana. Moderated by Adam Thies, Indiana University Associate Vice President, Capital Planning & Facilities, the panel will include Steve Dayton, Project Architect, Thomas Phifer and Partners; Ron Johnson, Structural Engineer, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM); and Edward Windhorst, Mies van der Rohe’s biographer.

 

Thomas Phifer and Partners is also the architect for IU’s new Ferguson International Center, currently under construction directly across North Eagleson Avenue from the Mies building of the Eskenazi School.

 

 

Rediscovered Design by Mies, Realized After 70 Years, Welcomes Faculty and Students at Start of Spring 2022 Semester

 

Open House and Reception Scheduled for April 8, 2022

 






Exterior view of the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, a Mies van der Rohe Design,

on the campus of Indiana University Bloomington. © Hadley Fruits

 

DOWNLOAD PRESS MATERIALS

 

BLOOMINGTON, IN, February 22, 2022 — Peg Faimon, Dean of Indiana University’s Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, today announced that the School’s Mies van der Rohe building has opened to students, faculty, and the public for the spring semester. The building, which serves as a shared facility for the School, is the realization of a recently rediscovered 1952 design that Mies created for the Bloomington campus. The design has been sensitively adapted for contemporary use by the architectural team of Thomas Phifer and Partners. Lecture, workshop, student collaboration, administrative and office program spaces are included.

 

Originally commissioned for an IU chapter of the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, which subsequently abandoned the project, the Mies design was all but forgotten for some sixty years. It re-emerged in 2013 when Sidney Eskenazi, a member of the former chapter, informed IU’s then-President Michael A. McRobbie of the existence of Mies’s drawings for the building. Following a trail of rediscovery, IU found documentation of the project in the archives of the Art Institute of Chicago and New York’s Museum of Modern Art. In 2019, IU announced that it would realize the 10,000-square-foot, two-story building, paying for construction with a portion of a $20 million donation from Sidney and Lois Eskenazi.

 

The 60-foot-wide, 140-foot-long building is made principally of thin, white-painted steel and expansive glass in panes measuring 10 feet square, with select gray limestone and white epoxy terrazzo. Floor-to-ceiling windows wrap around the entire second story, which features a central exterior square atrium, giving the impression of transparency throughout the building. Much of the lower level is open to the air, with the second or main story elegantly elevated above the ground plane. Architecturally, the building has a strong relationship to both the contemporaneous Farnsworth House and the massing and form of many of Mies’s early concepts for buildings at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Select furnishings designed by Mies and Florence Knoll, respectively, have been chosen to complement the building’s design and era.

 

Peg Faimon said, “We are thrilled to mark the opening of the Mies Building, which will enable faculty and students of all our School’s programs to come together and collaborate. Just as important, this magnificent building shows who we are, representing the excellence to which we are committed. There can be no greater inspiration for us than to learn and work in a masterpiece by this titan of twentieth-century architecture. Let us hope that it will be a lasting monument to the power of collaborations and connections of all kinds—artistic, creative, intellectual and, above all, human.

 

To celebrate the realization of the building, the Eskenazi School will hold a public open house and reception on April 8, 2022. There will also be an invitation-only panel discussion on the background and design of the building and the history of Mies’s work in Indiana. Moderated by Adam Thies, Indiana University Associate Vice President, Capital Planning & Facilities, the panel will include Steve Dayton, Project Architect, Thomas Phifer and Partners; Ron Johnson, Structural Engineer, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM); and Edward Windhorst, Mies van der Rohe’s biographer.

 

Thomas Phifer and Partners is also the architect for IU’s new Ferguson International Center, currently under construction directly across North Eagleson Avenue from the Mies building of the Eskenazi School.

#indianuniversity#fneartmagazine#artfun

 

Thursday, February 17, 2022

Amy Nelder: Early Spring lineup of Shows.

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

NYWIFT colleagues at our February 2022 virtual speed networking mixer. We will be joined by our friends from Ghetto Film School’s Roster!

Gather together online with your NYWIFT colleagues at our February 2022 virtual speed networking mixer. We will be joined by our friends from Ghetto Film School’s Roster!

Come ready to share creative ideas, suggestions, project pitches, and contact info for further engagement. 

We will begin the evening with a five-minute salon conversation to discuss the The Roster’s latest opportunities and initiatives, followed by about 90 minutes of speed networking, during which you will be randomly paired off with other attendees to network one-on-one. 

NYWIFT will also offer a discount on membership to any new members who attend that evening. 

NYWIFT hangouts are a safe space to ask entertainment related questions, seek advice, employment and other industry opportunities. Prep your elevator pitch and get ready to make connections!

As always, all members are welcome and encouraged to attend and mix, mingle and get to know our dynamic and talented members and staff in an informal setting.

DATE
Thursday, February 17, 2022

TIME
6 PM – 7:30 PM EST

PLATFORM
Zoom

Free to attend. 

Register

Please RSVP no later than Thursday, February 17 at 3 PM EST in order to attend. 

About Ghetto Film School Roster

Roster is the go-to wayfinding and talent identification resource in the media & entertainment industry. We help identify, develop, and connect emerging talent with the resources they need to advance in their careers.

 

About New York Women in Film & Television

New York Women in Film & Television (NYWIFT) advocates for equality in the moving image industry and supports women in every stage of their careers. As the preeminent entertainment industry association for women in New York, NYWIFT energizes women by illuminating their achievements, presenting training and professional development programs, awarding scholarships and grants, and providing access to a supportive community of peers.

NYWIFT brings together more than 2,500 women and men working both above and below the line. NYWIFT is part of a network of 50 women in film chapters worldwide, representing more than 15,000 members. NYWIFT produces over 50 innovative programs and special events annually, including the Muse Awards for Vision and Achievement, which honors women in front of and behind the camera, and Designing Women, which recognizes costume designers, makeup artists and hair stylists in the industry.