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- Exhibition Poster, "American Printmaking: The First 150 Years," 1970 -

- 11 March 1970 - 12 April 1970
- Collections - Artifact
Exhibition Poster, "American Printmaking: The First 150 Years," 1970
- "Computer Graphics in Color," Article from "Bell Laboratories Record," May 1974 - Lillian Schwartz is a pioneer of computer-generated art. From 1969-2002, she was a "resident visitor" at Bell Laboratories, producing groundbreaking films, videos, and multimedia works. The Schwartz Collection spans Lillian's childhood into her late career, documenting an expansive mindset, mastery over traditional and experimental mediums alike--and above all--an ability to create inspirational connections between science, art, and technology.

- May 01, 1974
- Collections - Artifact
"Computer Graphics in Color," Article from "Bell Laboratories Record," May 1974
Lillian Schwartz is a pioneer of computer-generated art. From 1969-2002, she was a "resident visitor" at Bell Laboratories, producing groundbreaking films, videos, and multimedia works. The Schwartz Collection spans Lillian's childhood into her late career, documenting an expansive mindset, mastery over traditional and experimental mediums alike--and above all--an ability to create inspirational connections between science, art, and technology.
- "Square Dance" Laser Image from Laserium: The Cosmic Laser Concert, 1976 -

- 1976
- Collections - Artifact
"Square Dance" Laser Image from Laserium: The Cosmic Laser Concert, 1976
- Mailer, "Emigre No. 34," 1995 - Emigre is a digital type foundry established by Rudy VanderLans and Zuzana Licko. The company's history is linked with the introduction of the 1984 Macintosh computer, used to design their early bitmapped typefaces. Emigre's digital work gained notoriety -- defying visual communication standards with fractured, layered combinations of text and image. This item advertised fonts or other items available for purchase.

- 1995
- Collections - Artifact
Mailer, "Emigre No. 34," 1995
Emigre is a digital type foundry established by Rudy VanderLans and Zuzana Licko. The company's history is linked with the introduction of the 1984 Macintosh computer, used to design their early bitmapped typefaces. Emigre's digital work gained notoriety -- defying visual communication standards with fractured, layered combinations of text and image. This item advertised fonts or other items available for purchase.