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Girard Environmental Enrichment Panels

Style: love heart

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This item is IN STORE PICKUP ONLY!

These decorative silkscreen designs known as the Girard Environmental Enrichment Panels were originally released in 1972 to personalize and add an element of “aesthetic functionalism” to the installation of Action Office environments. Unlike Girard’s printed textiles, the panels consist of single stand-alone images that range from abstract patterns to figurative pictograms. Playful and bold, the Girard Environmental Enrichment Panels serve as the exclamation point at the end of Girard’s long tenure with Herman Miller®.

Black & White - 41.33"H x 31.5"W
Love Heart - 34"H x 31.5"W

Mid-Century Architecture

Mid-Century Architecture

Phoenix Art Museum, both as an institution and a structure, has evolved through distinct expansions over more than half a century. Initially designed in the 1950s by Frank Lloyd Wright apprentices Alden B. Dow and Blaine Drake, the museum was completed in 1959 as part of the Phoenix Civic Center complex. This complex also included the Phoenix Little Theater and the Phoenix Central Public Library.

Situated at the northeast corner of Central Avenue—Phoenix’s primary north-south thoroughfare—and McDowell Road, the Civic Center originally featured three low, horizontally oriented, stucco-clad modern buildings, each dedicated to one of the institutions. These buildings were interconnected by ramadas and surrounded by landscaped courtyards. The main structures formed a large central courtyard, with the library positioned on the southern side along McDowell Road, the art museum to the northwest along Central Avenue, and the theater to the northeast at the rear of the site.

Phoenix Art Museum, both as an institution and a structure, has evolved through distinct expansions over more than half a century. Initially designed in the 1950s by Frank Lloyd Wright apprentices Alden B. Dow and Blaine Drake, the museum was completed in 1959 as part of the Phoenix Civic Center complex. This complex also included the Phoenix Little Theater and the Phoenix Central Public Library.

Situated at the northeast corner of Central Avenue—Phoenix’s primary north-south thoroughfare—and McDowell Road, the Civic Center originally featured three low, horizontally oriented, stucco-clad modern buildings, each dedicated to one of the institutions. These buildings were interconnected by ramadas and surrounded by landscaped courtyards. The main structures formed a large central courtyard, with the library positioned on the southern side along McDowell Road, the art museum to the northwest along Central Avenue, and the theater to the northeast at the rear of the site.

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Members of Phoenix Art Museum save 10% off all regularly priced merchandise!

Members of Phoenix Art Museum save 10% off all regularly priced merchandise!