More than 35 years after first encountering one another in Manhattan at the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies (which Peter Eisenman had ...
Continue Reading βThis book brings together for the first time detailed analyses of Tridentine liturgical reform, Counter-Reformation sanctity and the late Renaissance ‘revolution’ in historical ...
Continue Reading βGian Lorenzo Bernini (1598β1680), sculptor, architect, painter, and playwright, was the most influential artist of seventeenth-century Rome and, indeed, one of the leading ...
Continue Reading βFrom the first treatise on architecture in antiquity, wholeness and finality were among the chief aspirations of architects, both in individual designs and ...
Continue Reading βArchitecture matters. To our cities, to our planet, to our personal lives. How we design and what we build has an impact that ...
Continue Reading βDescriptions of imaginary buildings abound in late medieval and early modern texts in France as in other European countries. The vogue for allegorical ...
Continue Reading β‘French Classicism’ remains an oddly elusive concept, not least because there appears to be an unbridgeable divide between the undisputed greatness of the ...
Continue Reading βFocusing on the creative and inventive significance of drawing for architecture, this book by one of its greatest proponents,Peter Cook, is an established ...
Continue Reading βArt historians have in the past narrowly defined primitivism, limiting their inquiry to examples of direct stylistic borrowing from African, Oceanic, or Native ...
Continue Reading βWidely acknowledged as Britainβs leading architectural historian, Sir Howard Colvin has been responsible for fundamental research that has helped to bring about a ...
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