Data copyright © Harrison Eiteljorg, II unless otherwise stated
This work is licensed under the ADS Terms of Use and Access.
Harrison
Eiteljorg, II
Center for the Study of Architecture
Box 60
Bryn Mawr
PA 19010
USA
This section provides access to all the photographs taken during the project. This is either via a plan of the building including different view points or from a drop down list of the different areas.
Click on the viewpoint icons (small eyes) in the images below to see the photographs of that aspect or select from the drop down list below.
The plans below may be used to call up most of the web images of the Propylaea. The upper plan will lead to groups of photographs of the exterior, and the lower plan will lead to groups of photographs of the interior. Each icon - designed to resemble a human eye looking in a specific direction - is intended to represent a VERY approximate point of view.
Each full-resolution image has a caption that includes the description, a copyright notice, the name of the photographer, the date the photograph was taken, the film type (or statement that the original image was digital), and the resolution of the digital file, expressed in pixels and always with the smaller number first, regardless of the orientation of the image. All these images are JPEG images that have been automatically corrected for color and exposure (and may therefore have been improperly corrected) and compressed at JPEG level 5 (with 1 being the most and 12 the least compression).
Some of the archival images are high-resolution TIFF scans of slides; others are in various formats directly from digital cameras. Note that the color and exposure modifications of the scans of slides were not accomplished in the automated process used at CSA but by the scanning company (Luna Imaging); in addition, the resolution of the scans is stated to be 2000 x 3000; that is an approximation. The slides were scanned in their cardboard mounts; so they are not all precisely the same. However, the difference from one slide to the next is not large enough to be noteworthy.