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<< Thursday, January 15, 2009 >>


Fatal Design

Exhibit - Artifacts | October 31, 2008 – January 16, 2009 every day | 210 Wurster Hall


Nantucket Cemetery, Charles Sumner Greene Collection

Environmental Design Archives and Environmental Design Library


The great public cemeteries in the United States all began as monumental landscapes, playgrounds for the picturesque, where the growing middle classes both buried their dead and took refuge from the rapidly industrializing cities. There they could contemplate the “sweet hereafter” in a setting with an obvious kinship to Central Park or the leafy suburbs, then rising as part of the same cultural forces that created the modern cemetery. Still, these silent cities evolved from a social form that gave us a range of civic institutions including the temple and the astronomical observatory, the theater, and the university. But where has this great social form gone in the last century? Fatal Design tells the tale through the rich holdings of the Environmental Design Archives and Library.

Environmental Design Library
Volkmann Reading Room
210 Wurster Hall
University of California, Berkeley
Raymond Lifchez and Judith Lee Stronach Exhibition Cases

Directions & Hours
www.lib.berkeley.edu/ENVI/hours.html

Curators
Andrew Shanken, Assistant Professor, Department of Architecture
Waverly Lowell, Curator, Environmental Design Archives


All Audiences

All Audiences


510-642-4818