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Melich, Henry (Architect)

  • Persona
  • 1924-1999

Henry Melich was born in Czechoslovakia in 1924. He lived in London for a number of years where he was classically trained before relocating to the Bahamas in 1954 where he began his extensive work around the archipelago. While based in the Bahamas for the remainder of his life, his work extended to Jamaica, the United States, and England. The book "Island Follies" by Alaistar Gordon highlights Melich's residential work in the Bahamas. His work is a celebration of Bahamian architecture, as well as embracing a neo-historical hybrid of architectural styles. Many of the homes he designed were luxury vacation homes for the elite, notably for Prince and Princess Azamat Guirey. Melich completed over 50 projects before his death in 1999.

Nover, Lex

"Lex ‘Lonehood’ Nover has been crafting imaginative worlds through visual art, photography, writing, and performance since the early 1980s. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, he first gained attention for his xerographic art, with solo exhibitions in Madison and San Francisco, where he relocated in 1984. His early performance art blended surrealist imagery and comic storytelling, using an overhead projector to conjure dynamic tableaus from transparencies, live objects, and narration.

In the mid-80s, Lex teamed up with writer/performer Jenny Magnus for the 'Slashword' series—a sequence of short, sharp theatrical vignettes that graced stages from San Francisco’s The Lab and Art Motel to the Chicago Repertory Theatre. Around the same time, he was spinning eclectic soundscapes as 'AL-X,' a DJ on UC Berkeley’s KALX radio, where he also co-founded the humor collective Radio Trauma. Lex’s photographic journey deepened during this decade, nurtured at San Francisco’s Harvey Milk Photo Center and refined through post-graduate studies in alternative and digital media at San Francisco State. This led to the development of his signature painted developer technique in the ‘90s— applying darkroom chemicals by brush to create unique photo-paintings. These works found audiences at venues like Intersection for the Arts, the SF Arts Commission Gallery, and the Robert Koch Gallery, and earned recognition in Photo Metro, Artweek, and the San Jose Mercury News.

His solo performance work continued into the '90s, with notable shows at San Francisco venues like The Marsh, 1800 Square Feet, and Artists Television Access, and Highways in Santa Monica, where he staged his multi-character narrative Decompositions. With artist Fred Rinne, he created the tragicomic rock opera Our Manilow, Ourselves, presented at New Langton Arts with support from a Bay Area Award Show grant. Lex was also an avid participant in the legendary San Francisco Cacophony Society, performing in its surreal, Dada-influenced events like Night of the Exquisite Corpse at the Victoria Theater, the notorious Fantasia prank protest at the Castro Theatre, and Santanarchy in Los Angeles.

In 1995, Lex received a grant from the San Francisco Chronicle to launch Offbeat, a pioneering web magazine he created to showcase avant-garde art and countercultural currents on SFGate.com. He also curated exhibitions and performances at 'Figure 8,' a gallery space he ran from his loft in San Francisco’s South of Market district. As the millennium turned, Lex shifted toward freelance writing. He penned columns for SFGate (Flipside: Adventures in High & Low Culture), Microsoft’s San Francisco Sidewalk (The Lex Files), and, after moving to New York City in 1999, CityTripping (Lex and the City).

In 2003, Lex became the Web Producer for Coast to Coast AM, the iconic overnight radio show delving into UFOs, the paranormal, and the uncanny. His deep immersion in these realms culminated in his mind-bending nonfiction book Nightmareland: Travels at the Borders of Sleep, Dreams, and Wakefulness (Random House, 2019). Based in Fort Lauderdale since 2010, Lex continues to explore the intersections of digital art, photography, and storytelling. He is currently developing a fictional podcast about 19th-century mediums with collaborator Kate Saeed, while also cultivating his passion for gardening—treating it as a living, breathing canvas. In 2023, Lex embraced AI photography, drawn to its strange new frontiers. In 2025, two of his works were selected to be featured in the exhibit, Expand and Contract 2025: AI and Alternative Processes at the Los Angeles Center of Photography." -- biography by Lex Nover, 2025.

University of Miami

  • Entidad colectiva
  • 1925-

Founded in 1925, the University of Miami is a private research university with more than 15,000 students from around the world. It comprises 12 schools and colleges serving undergraduate and graduate students in more than 180 majors and programs.

Iron Arrow Honor Society

  • Entidad colectiva

The Iron Arrow Honor Society, founded in 1926, is a highly selective honor society for students, faculty, staff, and alumni at the University of Miami. Historically, the Society was male-only, founded as the "The Highest Honor Attained by Men." After several years of social and legal pressure, the all-male membership voted to admit women in 1985. Criteria for membership include scholarship, leadership, character, humility, and love of alma mater. Membership in the Society is the highest honor bestowed by the University.

Ashe, Bowman Foster, 1885-1952

  • Familia

Dr. Bowman Foster Ashe was the first President of the University of Miami from 1926 to 1952. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in economics in 1912 from the University of Pittsburgh, taught English and history in public schools, and later received an appointment to the University of Pittsburgh's faculty and administration. The University awarded Dr. Ashe an honorary LL.D. degree in 1927 for his many achievements.

Bowman Foster Ashe, first president of the University of Miami, served from 1926 to 1952. Born in 1885, he earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Pittsburgh. After graduation, he took a job teaching English and history in public school. Ashe also worked as the educational/social director of Langeloth, a model town near Pittsburgh. Ashe’s work eventually led him back to the University of Pittsburgh where he became a faculty member and supervised the admission, transfer and academic progress of freshmen and sophomores.

The founders of UM hired Ashe from Pittsburgh to oversee the institution during its challenged infancy. In 1929, with the collapse of the economy, UM's financial plight was severe, but Ashe held it together almost single-handedly during the dual hardships of the land boom failure in Florida and the Great Depression. During Ashe's presidency, the University added the School of Law (1928), the School of Business Administration (1929), the School of Education (1929), the Graduate School (1941), the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (1943), the School of Engineering (1947), and the School of Medicine (1952). He took over as Chairman of its Board of Trustees in 1929, but later gave up that role and continued as President until 1952, the year of his death.

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