Difference between revisions of "Ralph Appelbaum Associates"

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==References==
 
==References==
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*David W. Dunlap, "New York Firms Chosen to Design Clinton Library," ''New York Times,'' August 9, 1999.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
  
 
*[http://www.raany.com/html/proj_04/portProj_Clinton.html Appelbaum's William J. Clinton Presidential Center project description]
 
*[http://www.raany.com/html/proj_04/portProj_Clinton.html Appelbaum's William J. Clinton Presidential Center project description]

Revision as of 21:31, 1 January 2008

Ralph Appelbaum Associates (RAA) is designer of Clinton Library exhibits. According to RAA the exhibits "create an immersive, in-depth program that conveys the day-to-day work of the Clinton administration and its impact on people here and around the world." Ralph Appelbaum has said that Bill Clinton himself took an active part in the creation of displays. He called the president the "the editor in chief, the curator in chief, and sometimes the art director."

Towering piers in the main museum space emulate the look and feel of Trinity College Library in Dublin, Ireland, which Bill Clinton admired greatly.

The main floor is dominated by a Time Line measuring 120 feet in length presented on a series of eight canted gray metal slabs, one for each year of Clinton's presidency. The Time Line is also divided into sections on "One America," "One World," and "The Economy."

Surrounding the slabs on the main floor are sixteen policy alcoves: Putting People First, Learning Across a Lifetime, Building One America, Science and Technology, the Fight for Power, Preparing for New Threats, Expanding Our Shared Prosperity (two alcoves), Restoring the Economy, Making Communities Safer, Protecting the Earth, Work of the First Lady, Building a Global Community (two alcoves), and Confronting Conflicts/Making Peace (two alcoves).

The upper floor mezzanine contains exhibits of biographical material and life in the White House.

Recreations of the White House Oval Office and Cabinet Room.

References

  • David W. Dunlap, "New York Firms Chosen to Design Clinton Library," New York Times, August 9, 1999.

External links