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- Toshiko Mori - <div><div><div><p>Throughout her career as a practicing architect and educator, Toshiko Mori has pursued a technical interest in the properties of materials--and especially synthetic materials--in addition to her concerns for purity of line, visual lightness and thermal performance.</p></div></div></div>

- January 05, 2010
- Collections - Video
Toshiko Mori
Throughout her career as a practicing architect and educator, Toshiko Mori has pursued a technical interest in the properties of materials--and especially synthetic materials--in addition to her concerns for purity of line, visual lightness and thermal performance.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 22 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 22
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 35 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 35
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 25 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 25
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 65 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 65
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 17 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 17
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 54 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 54
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 62 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 62
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 37 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 37
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.
- Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 6 - As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.

- February 11, 2009
- Collections - Artifact
Oral History Interview with Architect Toshiko Mori, February, 2009--Photographs--Digital Images--Item 6
As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research. In 2009, staff from The Henry Ford interviewed Mori at her office in New York as part of the Collecting Innovation Today Oral History Project.