Architectural photography legend Julius Shulman died on Wednesday at the age of 98. Take a look at this gallery we did in March, and listen to the All Things Considered story.
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Julius Shulman/Getty Research Institute
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Julius Shulman/Getty Research Institute
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Julius Shulman/Getty Research Institute
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Julius Shulman/Getty Research Institute
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Pereira & Luckman and Julius Shulman/Getty Research Institute
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Julius Shulman/Getty Research Institute
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Julius Shulman/Getty Research Institute
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Kaufman House, Palm Springs, Calif., 1947. Richard Neutra was the architect.
Julius Shulman/Getty Research Institute
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This print of the Kaufman House in Shulman's office shows his fondess for not only the tangible, but also for the massive.
Shondell Spiegel/NPR
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Nogai explained that when photographing interiors, they seek the human element. If the owners move things out of the room, Shulman and Nogai will often bring them back in. "We just want to show how people are living," says Nogai. Shondell Spiegel House, 2008.
Photo by Julius Shulman & Juergen Nogai
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The Philip Johnson Glass House, New Canaan, Conn.
Photo by Julius Shulman & Juergen Nogai
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Case Study House No. 21, Hollywood. This house was designed by the renowned American architect Pierre Koenig who also designed the house in Case Study No. 22.
Photo by Julius Shuluman & Juergen Nogai
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