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The Berlin Wall as a political symbol (K-A)
The Berlin Wall as a political symbol (K-A)
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Course:
Architecture and design (K-A)
Discipline:
Social Sciences
Institute:
Khan Academy
Instructor(s):
Level:
Undergraduate
Architecture and design (K-A)
A Landmark Decision: Penn Station, Grand Central, and the architectural heritage of NYC (K-A)
An artifact of racism: a Connecticut Klan robe (K-A)
Breuer, The Whitney Museum of American Art (now The Met Breuer) (K-A)
Frank Lloyd Wright, Fallingwater (K-A)
Frank Lloyd Wright, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (K-A)
Gilbert, Woolworth Building (K-A)
Glass Chair at the 1939 New York World's Fair (K-A)
Gordon Bunshaft, Lever House (K-A)
Le Corbusier, Villa Savoye (K-A)
Mies van der Rohe, Seagram Building (K-A)
Negotiating the past in Berlin: the Palast der Republik (K-A)
Peter Behrens, Turbine Factory (K-A)
Rockefeller Center (K-A)
Russel Wright, "American Modern" Pitchers (K-A)
Sullivan, Carson, Pirie, Scott Building (K-A)
The Berlin Wall as a political symbol (K-A)
Van Alen, The Chrysler Building (K-A)
Venturi, House in New Castle County, Delaware (K-A)
Wagner, Postal Savings Bank (K-A)