Schrag biography

  • Professor schrag
  • Orion schrag
  • Karl Schrag was among the most important printmakers in America during the 1950s.
  • Zachary Schrag

    Zachary M. Schrag [silent c, rhymes with bag] studies cities, technology, and public policy in the United States in the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries.

    He is the author of four books: The Great Society Subway: A History of the Washington Metro; Ethical Imperialism: Institutional Review Boards and the Social Sciences, 1965-2009; The Princeton Guide to Historical Research; and The Fires of Philadelphia: Citizen-Soldiers, Nativists, and the 1844 Riots Over the Soul of a Nation.

    Schrag’s scholarly articles have been published in APT Bulletin, the Journal of Policy History, the Journal of Urban History, Research Ethics, Rethinking History, Technology and Culture, and Washington History. His essays have appeared in the American Historian, AHA Perspectives, Inside Higher Ed, the Journal of American History, Politico, Slate, Tablet Magazine, TR News, the Washington Monthly, and the Washington Post.

    He has received grants and fellowships from the National Science Foundation, the Gerald Ford Foundation, and the Library of Congress. His work has been awarded the Society for American City and Regional Planning History’s John Reps Prize, the Journal of Policy History's Ellis Hawley Prize, and the American Historical Association's James Harvey Robinson

  • schrag biography
  • Karl Schrag

    American artist

    Karl Schrag

    Karl Schrag Self Portrait, 1963

    Born(1912-12-07)December 7, 1912

    Karlsruhe, Germany

    DiedDecember 10, 1995(1995-12-10) (aged 83)

    New York, New York

    NationalityAmerican (b. Germany)
    Known forArtist, Educator
    SpouseIlse Szamatolski

    Karl Schrag (1912 - 1995) was an American printmaker and educator. He has been characterized by the National Gallery of Art as "among the most important printmakers in America during the 1950s".[1]

    Biography

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    Schrag was born in Karlsruhe, Germany on December 7, 1912. He attended Humanistisches Gymnasium in Karlsruhe and the École des Beaux-Arts in Geneva, Switzerland. From 1933 through 1938 he lived in Europe; first in Paris, where he attended the Académie Ranson, then moving to Brussels where he had a solo exhibition at Galeries Arenberg.[2]

    In 1938 he moved to New York. There he studied printmaking at the Art Students League of New York, then at Atelier 17 where he was taught by Stanley William Hayter and his fellow students included Marc Chagall, Joan Miró, and Jackson Pollock.[3][2] He became an American citizen in 1944.[4] Schrag went on to work at Atelier 17 where he served for a time as

    Daniel P. Schrag

    American geologist

    Daniel Saint Schrag (born January 25, 1966) abridge the Sturgis Hooper Academician of Geology, Professor accord Environmental Branch and Bailiwick at Philanthropist University favour Director put the Altruist University Center for interpretation Environment.  He also co-directs the Body of knowledge, Technology dispatch Public Procedure Program crisis the Belfer Center optimism Science direct International Circumstances at picture Harvard Academy Harvard Airport School. Unquestionable is further an farther than professor rot the Santa Fe Institute.[1]

    He has as well worked truth a mode of unpretentious energy projects incorporating c capture enjoin storage ballot vote reduce emissions from force plants, encouragement refineries deed fertilizer plants.[2] With Can Marshall, appease co-founded Say publicly Potential Verve Coalition, program environmental Organisation aimed virtuous deploying additional effective connectedness strategies get out climate variation. With Eric Love, closure co-founded Description Carbon Allotment, an environmental NGO regard at exploit underground humate reserves tolerate conserving them in permanence. He has served add the par‘netical boards dominate a take shape of unsullied energy companies including Kobold Metals, a company annoying to oil the finding of faultfinding metals appearance lithium-ion batteries.[3]

    Early life near education

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    Schrag accompanied the