Casual photo of Morton C. Bradley Jr. sitting outside on a patio chair. He is wearing a white shirt and khaki pants. There are several plants and a tree in the background.
Photograph of a sculpture created by Morton C. Bradley, Jr., in 2004. This sculpture is composed of Schoen minimal surface gyroids. The Great Minimal Surface begins Bradley’s Minimal Surface series, the most innovative and distinct series of…
Photograph of a sculpture created by Morton C. Bradley, Jr., in 2003. This sculpture is a composite form. Composed of twelve halved icosidodecahedra, twenty halved cubeoctaheadra and thirty halved octahedra, Archimedes is a complex, composite form.…
Photograph of a sculpture created by Morton C. Bradley, Jr., in 1991. This sculpture is an octahedral form. Inspired by the helices seen in The Graph (cat. 53), Bradley moves the Helices series forward to create a groundbreaking piece that would set…
Photographs of a sculpture created by Morton C. Bradley, Jr., in 1974. This sculpture is a series of seventy-two nesting concave five-sided forms and a series of twenty nesting, concave three-sided forms inside an icosidodecahedron. One of Bradley’s…
Photograph of a sculpture created by Morton C. Bradley, Jr., in 1971. This sculpture is a constellation of twelve great stellated dodecahedra surrounding a dodecahedron. Considered by Bradley to be his first successful geometric sculpture, Firebird…
The museum’s archival materials, located on the second floor of the Morton C. Bradley, Jr. Education Center, include letters, photographs, and ephemera.
The director’s office, located on the second floor of the Morton C. Bradley, Jr. Education Center, overlooks the Wylie House and gardens. Its furnishings include pieces from the Bradley estate.
The Theophilus Wylie Library is located on the second floor of the Morton C. Bradley, Jr. Education Center. Wylie’s grandchildren donated his library to Indiana University with the following message: “This collections as it now stands represents the…
The Outdoor Interpreter’s office, located in the basement of the Morton C. Bradley, Jr. Education Center, looks out over the Wylie House gardens and contains additional storage space for museum materials.