Drawing, War Crime Study (1969) by Richard Scott Hill is part of Georgia's State Art Collection. Mixed media, 24 x 35 inches with matte
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Dream Castle by Harry Aiken is part of Georgia's State Art Collection. According to Aiken, "Traveling through France I was taken by this castle surrounded by a lily pond. What I was really taken with was the second castle lying on the water. That was the one I wanted to explore." Color photograph, 16 3/4 x 12 inches
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Earthenware Container by Susan Loftin is part of Georgia's State Art Collection. Clay, 3 1/2 x 3 1/2 x 4 inches
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Edward Daugherty began the study of landscape architecture after the onset of Modernism and was the first and most important of this new generation of practitioners in Atlanta and the Southeast. Daugherty’s work ranges from small gardens and estates to schools, colleges, cultural institutions, and environmentally sensitive large developments.
Notable achievements of Daugherty’s career include the preservation of the Marietta Square (1961) in downtown Marietta and the subsequent plan for downtown redevelopment in Atlanta (1970), the grounds of Georgia’s Governor’s Mansion (1967), the Atlanta Botanical Garden (1981-95), and the Georgia Institute of Technology (1955-75).
The Emory Eye Center is currently in the top ten eye-research institutions in the country in the amount of funds granted by the National Institutes of Health.
Courtesy of Emory Eye Center
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