Few cities have a greater concentration of significant architecture than Oxford, England. Within a city of only 130,000 inhabitants there are important buildings, ...
Continue Reading βArchitecture, at least since the beginning of the twentieth century, has suspended historical references in favor of universalized abstraction. In the decades after ...
Continue Reading βInigo Jones, the first English classical architect, was famous in his own time and was the posthumous sponsor of the Palladian movement of ...
Continue Reading βAs private secretary to the Emperor Hadrian, the scholar Suetonius had access to the imperial archives and used them (along with eyewitness accounts) ...
Continue Reading βThe Edifice Complex explores the intimate and inextricable relationship between power, money and architecture in the twentieth century. How and why have presidents, ...
Continue Reading β“As demonstrated in Symbol and Myth, David Pierre Giottin Humbert de Superville’s (1770-1849) pioneering semiotics represented a systematic attempt to arrive at the ...
Continue Reading β‘If there is one thing we can learn from John Ruskin, it is that each age must find its own way to beauty’ ...
Continue Reading βThe myth of the artist-genius has long had a unique hold on the imagination of Western culture. Iconoclastic, temperamental, and free from the ...
Continue Reading βIn revolutionary France the life of things could not be assured. War, shortage of materials, and frequent changes in political authority meant that ...
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