The Arts  /  Architecture
Pittsburgh A New Portrait Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 528
ISBN: 9780822943716
Pub Date: 20 Sep 2009
Description:
From its founding in 1758, Pittsburgh has experienced several epic transformations. It began its existence as a fortress, on a site originally selected by George Washington. A hundred years later, and well into our own time, no other American city was as intensively industrialized, only to be later consigned to "rustbelt" status.
Hill Hall Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 544
ISBN: 9780854312917
Pub Date: 16 Jun 2009
Description:
This is the complete history of a building that began as a hunting lodge, late in the eleventh century and that grew to be the principal house of the manor of Theydon Mount in Essex, a small country retreat within easy reach of London. In 1556, the house was acquired by Sir Thomas Smith (1512-77), a man of humble origins but precocious intellect who became Regius Professor of Civil Law at Cambridge at the age of thirty and Chancellor of the University two years later. He then forsook academic for political life, becoming Master of Requests to the Lord Protector Somerset.
RRP: £55.00
Crystal and Arabesque Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 360
ISBN: 9780822943624
Pub Date: 15 Apr 2009
Description:
From the 1890s to the 1930s, Claude Bragdon enjoyed an international reputation as an architect, designer, and critic working in the progressive tradition associated with Louis Sullivan, Frank Lloyd Wright, and the Prairie School. In 1915 Bragdon created “projective ornament,” a system of geometric patterns designed to serve as a universal form-language integrating not only architecture, art, and design, but also a society divided by differences of class, gender, religion, culture, and national origin. Spreading across the surfaces of buildings, posters, books, and the settings Bragdon designed for massive community singing festivals, projective ornament came to symbolize the progressive potential of modernity for thousands of Americans.
Henry Austin Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 252
ISBN: 9780819568960
Pub Date: 17 Feb 2009
Illustrations: 131 illus. (39 colour)
Description:
Henry Austin's (1804-1891) works receive consideration in books on nineteenth-century architecture, yet no book has focused scholarly attention on his primary achievements in New Haven, Connecticut, in Portland, Maine, and elsewhere. Austin was most active during the antebellum era, designing exotic buildings that have captured the imaginations of many for decades. James F.
Vernacular Mudbrick Architecture in the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt, and the Design of the Dakhleh Oasis Training and Conservation Centre Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 63
ISBN: 9781842170595
Pub Date: 01 Nov 2008
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Series: Dakhleh Oasis Project Monographs
Illustrations: 76 b/w pls, plans and drawings
Description:
More than one third of the world's population lives in houses made of unfired earth bricks or stamped earth, materials also known as mud brick, adobe , terre crue , pisé , or rammed earth. Houses in the middle east have been made out this material for at least 10,000 years, but in many places this form of architecture is slowly being superceded by more recent building techniques using reinforced concrete and concrete blocks. This study contains a description of the remaining mud brick architecture in several villages in the Dakhleh Oasis in Egypt.
Designing the Centennial Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
ISBN: 9780813192130
Pub Date: 03 Oct 2008
Series: Material Worlds
Illustrations: photos
Description:
The 1876 United States Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia was not only the United States' first important world's fair, it signaled significant changes in the very shape of knowledge. Quarrels between participants in the exhibition represented a greater conflict as the world transitioned between two different kinds of modernity--the Enlightenment of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to the High Modern period of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.At the center of this movement was a shift in the perceived relationship between seeing and knowing and in the perception of what makes an object valuable--its usefulness as a subject of study and learning versus its ability to be bought and sold on the market.
Washed with Sun Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 424
ISBN: 9780822959588
Pub Date: 10 Jul 2008
Description:
South Africa is recognized as a site of both political turmoil and natural beauty, and yet little work has been done in connecting these defining national characteristics. Washed with Sun achieves this conjunction in its multidisciplinary study of South Africa as a space at once natural and constructed. Weaving together practical, aesthetic, and ideological analyses, Jeremy Foster examines the role of landscape in forming the cultural iconographies and spatialities that shaped the imaginary geography of emerging nationhood.
Sites Unseen Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 304
ISBN: 9780822959595
Pub Date: 18 May 2007
Description:
Sites Unseen challenges conventions for viewing and interpreting the landscape, using visual theory to move beyond traditional practices of describing and classifying objects to explore notions of audience and context. While other fields, such as art history and geography, have engaged poststructuralist theory to consider vision and representation, the application of such inquiry to the natural or built environment has lagged behind. This book, by treating landscape as a spatial, psychological, and sensory encounter, aims to bridge this gap, opening a new dialogue for discussing the landscape outside the boundaries of current art criticism and theory.
Healing Appalachia Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 456
ISBN: 9780813191775
Pub Date: 11 May 2007
Illustrations: photos
Description:
Healing Appalachia is the first book to apply "appropriate technology," or the simplest level of technology that can effectively achieve the desired result, specifically to the Appalachian region. The authors examine thirty low-cost, people-friendly, and environmentally benign appropriate technologies that are concerned with such issues as food preservation, land use, shelter, and transportation. They pay close attention to the practicality of each technique according to affordability, ease of use, and ecological soundness.
Clay Lancaster's Kentucky Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 144
ISBN: 9780813124216
Pub Date: 30 Mar 2007
Illustrations: photos
Description:
With a Foreword by Roger W. Moss Although Clay Lancaster (1917-2000) established himself as an expert on New York brownstones and California bungalows, the nationally known architectural historian also spent four decades photographing architecture in his native Kentucky. Lancaster had no flash bulb, no tripod, no close-up or wide-angle lenses, but he had a good eye and a love for his subject, producing photos that are works of art as well as documents of local history.
Deliciae Fictiles III Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 434
ISBN: 9781842172087
Pub Date: 11 Jul 2006
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Illustrations: 16p col plates, b/w illus
Description:
This edited volume of forty-four papers on terracottas opens with a section on New Research , followed by five geographical sections on: Etruria; Umbria and Abruzzo; The Faliscans, Rome and Latium; Campania and Magna Graecia; and Sicily. The terracottas in question are the various parts of roofing systems used by the ancient Italians Italic, Etruscan and colonial Greek and cover both domestic and temple architecture. Thirty-three papers are in Italian, nine in English and two in German.
Islamic Remains in Bahrain Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 207
ISBN: 9788788415100
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2001
Description:
The initial aim of the Danish archaeological campaigns in Bahrain was to look for settlements contemporary with the "Hundred Thousand Gravemounds". After the first few campaigns it was evident, however, that the island was such a rich archaeological field that investigation of all periods from the earliest flint-using culture to the later Islamic world was called for. Among the Islamic remains was an exceptionally fine collection of Early Islamic pottery and glass recovered from the rubbish which filled up a well at the Barbar site where a temple from around 2000BC was excavated.
Frank Lloyd Wrights House on Kentuck Knob Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 112
ISBN: 9780822941194
Pub Date: 18 May 2000
Description:
This is the first thorough guide to the design and history of "Kentuck," a splendid mountain house in southwestern Pennsylvania designed in 1953-1954 by Frank Lloyd Wright. Inspired by Fallingwater, the famous house only seven miles away that Wright designed above the waterfalls of Bear Run, local businessman I. N.
Ruins as Architecture Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
ISBN: 9780872331174
Pub Date: 11 Feb 2000
Description:
Thomas J. McCormick, a noted scholar of the century of Enlightenment, examines the phenomenon of the creation of man-made ruins as an architectural form. Picturesque grottos, Gothic Temples and "ruins to be inhabited by a hermit" are the focus of McCormick's study as he looks at these frequently playful yet melancholy monuments.
Saint Sophia at Constantinople Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 96
ISBN: 9780872331235
Pub Date: 01 May 1999
Illustrations: 14
Description:
Saint Sophia is surely one of the most-discussed buildings in the history of architecture. .
Hama 4, Part 1 -- The Medieval Citadel & Its Architecture Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 127
ISBN: 9788789438030
Pub Date: 30 Nov 1998
Series: Nationalmuseets Skrifter, Større Beretninger
Illustrations: b/w photos & plans
Description:
Two-Volume Set. This is the last volume in the series of reports from the Danish excavations on the ancient Tall of the important Syrian site and town of Hama. It presents the medieval architecture of the mound from the Arab conquest in 636 to 1401 when the citadel of Hama was destroyed by Timur Lenk.