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- Buckminster Fuller, "Inventions: Twelve Around One," 1981 -

- 1981
- Collections - Artifact
Buckminster Fuller, "Inventions: Twelve Around One," 1981
- Buckminster Fuller's Geodesic Dome Being Constructed for the United States Pavilion at Expo 67, 1966-1967 - Expo 67, held in Montreal, Canada, was the most attended world's fair of the 20th century. The United States pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter geodesic dome designed by visionary Buckminster Fuller and architect Shoji Sadao, was an interactive environmental exhibit. It remains the most iconic and fondly remembered of Fuller's built designs. This pavilion survives today as an attraction called the Biosphere.

- 1966-1967
- Collections - Artifact
Buckminster Fuller's Geodesic Dome Being Constructed for the United States Pavilion at Expo 67, 1966-1967
Expo 67, held in Montreal, Canada, was the most attended world's fair of the 20th century. The United States pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter geodesic dome designed by visionary Buckminster Fuller and architect Shoji Sadao, was an interactive environmental exhibit. It remains the most iconic and fondly remembered of Fuller's built designs. This pavilion survives today as an attraction called the Biosphere.
- Geodesic Dome Test Module, Designed by R. Buckminster Fuller, 1953 -

- 1953
- Collections - Artifact
Geodesic Dome Test Module, Designed by R. Buckminster Fuller, 1953
- Poster, "Best of Friends: Buckminster Fuller and Isamu Noguchi," 2006 -

- 2006
- Collections - Artifact
Poster, "Best of Friends: Buckminster Fuller and Isamu Noguchi," 2006
- Buckminster Fuller's Geodesic Dome Model for the United States Pavilion at Expo '67, circa 1967 - Expo 67, held in Montreal, Canada, was the most attended world's fair of the 20th century. The United States pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter geodesic dome designed by visionary Buckminster Fuller and architect Shoji Sadao, was an interactive environmental exhibit. It remains the most iconic and fondly remembered of Fuller's built designs. This pavilion survives today as an attraction called the Biosphere.

- circa 1967
- Collections - Artifact
Buckminster Fuller's Geodesic Dome Model for the United States Pavilion at Expo '67, circa 1967
Expo 67, held in Montreal, Canada, was the most attended world's fair of the 20th century. The United States pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter geodesic dome designed by visionary Buckminster Fuller and architect Shoji Sadao, was an interactive environmental exhibit. It remains the most iconic and fondly remembered of Fuller's built designs. This pavilion survives today as an attraction called the Biosphere.
- Buckminster Fuller Surrounded by Geodesic Structures in His Office, circa 1951 -

- circa 1951
- Collections - Artifact
Buckminster Fuller Surrounded by Geodesic Structures in His Office, circa 1951
- "Six Part Push-Pull," Tensegrity Sculpture Made by Thomas Zung, 2009 -

- December 01, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
"Six Part Push-Pull," Tensegrity Sculpture Made by Thomas Zung, 2009
- Intuition, 1972 -

- 1972
- Collections - Artifact
Intuition, 1972
- Whole Earth Catalog: The World Game, March 1970 - Biologist Steward Brand founded the Whole Earth Catalog in 1968, to connect counterculture and back-to-the-land communities with innovators in the fields of technology, design, and architecture. The cover of each edition, like this from March 1970, featured images of earth taken from outer space. Brand believed showing this would change people's perceptions of their responsibility for the planet.

- March 01, 1970
- Collections - Artifact
Whole Earth Catalog: The World Game, March 1970
Biologist Steward Brand founded the Whole Earth Catalog in 1968, to connect counterculture and back-to-the-land communities with innovators in the fields of technology, design, and architecture. The cover of each edition, like this from March 1970, featured images of earth taken from outer space. Brand believed showing this would change people's perceptions of their responsibility for the planet.
- Tensegrity, 2008 -

- 2008
- Collections - Artifact
Tensegrity, 2008