Box 74
Contains 58 Results:
Stevens family genealogical chart, 1949 January 1
Stevens family genealogical chart compiled by Horace N. Stevens.
Correspondence from Helen Coburn Stevens and John Peters Stevens III, 1952 April 14
Correspondence from Helen Coburn Stevens and John Peters Stevens III to the Stevens Family
Arensberg, Walter. "Vacuum tires: a formula for the digestion of figments." TNT (March 1919). On verso: Sheeler drawing and Soupault poem, 1919
Newspaper and magazine clippings about museums, galleries, art exhibitions, and artists, including Marcel Duchamp, Maria Martins, Francis Picabia, Pablo Picasso, and Brett and Edward Weston. Also includes clippings about the Arensbergs and their art collection and articles written by or about Walter Arensberg's Harvard University classmates, friends and associates.
Vacuum tires: a formula for the digestion of figments, 1919
Arensberg, Walter. "Vacuum tires: a formula for the digestion of figments." TNT (March 1919). Includes Sheeler drawing and Soupault poem on verso.
"Boston," Holiday (November 1953): 34-47, 93-94, 96, 1953
Newspaper and magazine clippings about museums, galleries, art exhibitions, and artists, including Marcel Duchamp, Maria Martins, Francis Picabia, Pablo Picasso, and Brett and Edward Weston. Also includes clippings about the Arensbergs and their art collection and articles written by or about Walter Arensberg's Harvard University classmates, friends and associates.
Holiday. "Boston", 1953
"Boston," Holiday (November 1953): 34-47, 93-94, 96. Article by John P. Marquand. Photographs by Tom Hollyman.
"How they know it's 'a bird' and are sure it is 'art'." American Weekly (1927): 6, undated
Newspaper and magazine clippings about museums, galleries, art exhibitions, and artists, including Marcel Duchamp, Maria Martins, Francis Picabia, Pablo Picasso, and Brett and Edward Weston. Also includes clippings about the Arensbergs and their art collection and articles written by or about Walter Arensberg's Harvard University classmates, friends and associates.
American Weekly. "How they know it's 'a bird' and are sure it is 'art'", undated
"How they know it's 'a bird' and are sure it is 'art'." American Weekly (1927): 6.