A few nice history images I found:
james stirling, cambridge university history faculty building, 1964-1967

Image by seier+seier
cambridge university history faculty building, 1964-1967.
architect: james stirling, 1926-1992.
a glass house posing as a brick building…
the stirling set so far.
A Brief History of Hollywood

Image by Profound Whatever
PART FIVE – Hollywood Goes to War: 1940-1950
1939 – Hollywood welcomes a brilliant 24-year-old theatre prodigy, Orson Welles. Though an industry outsider, Welles’ reputation earns him unprecedented independence in his filmmaking endeavors. In 1941, Welles joins forces with like-minded writer Herman Mankiewicz, cinematographer Gregg Toland, and editor Robert Wise to produce CITIZEN KANE, a thinly-veiled biography of media mogul and early studio owner William Randolph Hearst*. Despite a smear campaign by Hearst and attempts at sabotage by Louis B. Mayer, the film goes down in history as a hallmark of independent, artistic moviemaking. In 1998, the American Film Institute names CITIZEN KANE the greatest film of all time.
*In the film, Kane’s dying word is “Rosebud” – according to rumor, it was Hearst’s pet name for a certain part of his mistress’s anatomy.
CITIZEN KANE: www.youtube.com/watch?v=uNaDrnxp3L0