Remarks on Secular & Domestic Architecture, Present & FutureJ. Murray, 1857 - 285 Seiten |
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... character , a generous and natural treatment . -adapting every feature thoroughly and fearlessly to its uses , and an abstinence from over - strained effort beyond what the occasion demanded , accompanied by an instinctive power of ...
... character , a generous and natural treatment . -adapting every feature thoroughly and fearlessly to its uses , and an abstinence from over - strained effort beyond what the occasion demanded , accompanied by an instinctive power of ...
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... character , but the spontaneous productions of our builders , where no external influence is brought to bear upon them . Can anything be more execrable ? Can anything be more utterly at variance with what - one would think should be the ...
... character , but the spontaneous productions of our builders , where no external influence is brought to bear upon them . Can anything be more execrable ? Can anything be more utterly at variance with what - one would think should be the ...
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Sir George Gilbert Scott. one would think should be the character of a country village , or more deadening to all the natural feelings of the labourer for his home ? Look , again , at the rows of miserable houses in the suburbs of our ...
Sir George Gilbert Scott. one would think should be the character of a country village , or more deadening to all the natural feelings of the labourer for his home ? Look , again , at the rows of miserable houses in the suburbs of our ...
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... characters which do not belong to them . 2ndly . The want of unity of purpose as to the style to be taken as our leading type . 3rdly . Our want of boldness in fearlessly adapting the style chosen to the requirements , the appliances ...
... characters which do not belong to them . 2ndly . The want of unity of purpose as to the style to be taken as our leading type . 3rdly . Our want of boldness in fearlessly adapting the style chosen to the requirements , the appliances ...
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... phrase ) as the building becomes more monumental in its character ; but in no class of building can beauty be consistently permitted to interfere , in any degree , with the c 2 viewed in its bearing upon Domestic Buildings . 19.
... phrase ) as the building becomes more monumental in its character ; but in no class of building can beauty be consistently permitted to interfere , in any degree , with the c 2 viewed in its bearing upon Domestic Buildings . 19.
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 117 - ... whenever it finds occasion for change in its form or purpose, it submits to it without the slightest sense of loss either to its unity or majesty, — subtle and flexible like a fiery serpent, but ever attentive to the voice of the charmer.
Seite 141 - Unto the upright there ariseth light in the darkness : he is gracious, and full of compassion, and righteous.
Seite 287 - Handbook of Architecture. Being a Concise and Popular Account of the Different Styles prevailing in all Ages and Countries in the World. With a Description of the most remarkable Buildings.
Seite 119 - I am quite assured that all the irregularities that are so beautiful in ancient architecture are the result of certain necessary difficulties, and were never purposely designed ; for to make a building inconvenient for the sake of obtaining irregularity would be scarcely less ridiculous than preparing working drawings for a new ruin. But all these inconsistencies have arisen from this great error, — the plans of buildings are designed to suit the elevation, instead of the elevation being made subservient...
Seite 118 - ... not masked or concealed under one monotonous front, but by their variety in form and outline increasing the effect of the building.
Seite 118 - An architect should exhibit his skill by turning the difficulties which occur in raising an elevation from a convenient plan into so many picturesque beauties; and this constitutes the great difference between the principles of classic and pointed domestic architecture. In the former he would be compelled to devise expedients to conceal these irregularities; in the latter he has only to beautify them.
Seite 4 - It is not too much to say that the ruling theology of the Church of England in the latter half of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century was...
Seite 117 - Undefined in its slope of roof, height of shaft, breadth of arch, or disposition of ground plan, it can shrink into a turret, expand into a hall, coil into a staircase, or spring into a spire, with undegraded grace and unexhausted energy...