Recollections of A.N. Welby Pugin, and His Father, Augustus Pugin: With Notices of Their WorksE. Stanford, 1861 - 473 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 53.
Strana ii
With Notices of Their Works Benjamin Ferrey, Edmund Sheridan Purcell. NA 997 .P98 F3 LONDON : PRINTED BY W. CLOWES AND SONS , STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING - CROSS . ΤΟ A. J. BERESFORD HOPE , D.C.L. , & c.
With Notices of Their Works Benjamin Ferrey, Edmund Sheridan Purcell. NA 997 .P98 F3 LONDON : PRINTED BY W. CLOWES AND SONS , STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING - CROSS . ΤΟ A. J. BERESFORD HOPE , D.C.L. , & c.
Strana iii
With Notices of Their Works Benjamin Ferrey, Edmund Sheridan Purcell. ΤΟ A. J. BERESFORD HOPE , D.C.L. , & c . MY DEAR SIR , THE well - known interest which you take in all matters relating to the study of Mediæval Art renders any ...
With Notices of Their Works Benjamin Ferrey, Edmund Sheridan Purcell. ΤΟ A. J. BERESFORD HOPE , D.C.L. , & c . MY DEAR SIR , THE well - known interest which you take in all matters relating to the study of Mediæval Art renders any ...
Strana ii
With Notices of Their Works Benjamin Ferrey, Edmund Sheridan Purcell. London: PRINted by W. Clowes AND SoxS, STAMrond street AND CHARING-CROS8, TO A. J. BERESFORD HOPE, D.C.L., &c. Mi DEAR 3lB,
With Notices of Their Works Benjamin Ferrey, Edmund Sheridan Purcell. London: PRINted by W. Clowes AND SoxS, STAMrond street AND CHARING-CROS8, TO A. J. BERESFORD HOPE, D.C.L., &c. Mi DEAR 3lB,
Strana 71
... hope of accomplishing this was ever foremost in his mind , and the precise part of the country in which it might be realized was immaterial to him , provided there was some great castle or church , of architectural interest , near ...
... hope of accomplishing this was ever foremost in his mind , and the precise part of the country in which it might be realized was immaterial to him , provided there was some great castle or church , of architectural interest , near ...
Strana 87
... hope of some day taking a long journey with you in pursuit of our favourite object ; for believe me there is no person existing with whom it would afford me so much pleasure to travel as yourself . I fully hope and expect to join you ...
... hope of some day taking a long journey with you in pursuit of our favourite object ; for believe me there is no person existing with whom it would afford me so much pleasure to travel as yourself . I fully hope and expect to join you ...
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Recollections of A. N. Welby Pugin, and His Father Augustus Pugin: With ... Benjamin Ferrey Úplné zobrazenie - 1861 |
Recollections of A.N. Welby Pugin and His Father, Augustus Pugin: With ... Benjamin Ferrey Úplné zobrazenie - 1861 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
A. W. PUGIN Abbey admiration ages altar Alton Towers amongst ancient Anglican antiquity archi architect artist Augustus Welby Augustus Welby Pugin beautiful bishops buildings Castle cathedral century chapel character Charles Barry Christian Architecture Church of England classic architecture clergy colour DEAR delight devoted divine drawings ecclesiastical edifices effect elder Pugin English erected executed exhibit faith father fear feeling genius glorious glory Gothic architecture Gothic revival hierarchy holy honour illustration interest labours letter London Lord Shrewsbury manner matters medieval medieval architecture medieval art ment mind Minton modern Nash never objects opinion ornaments Oscott Pagan person present Protestant pupils Ramsgate religion religious remarks restoration revival Roman Catholic Church Rome sacred sketches solemn spirit style taste tecture temporal things tion tower Tractarian True Principles truth views Welby Pugin Windsor Castle worship writings
Populárne pasáže
Strana 112 - The mechanical part of Gothic architecture is pretty well understood, but it is the principles which influenced ancient compositions, and the soul which appears in all the former works, which is so lamentably deficient ; nor, as I have before stated, can they be regained but by a restoration of the ancient feelings and sentiments. 'Tis they alone that can restore Gothic architecture...
Strana 87 - I was much delighted with the restoration of Magdalen College Chapel by Mr. Cottingham, which I can truly say is one of the most beautiful sjxjcimens of modern design that I have ever seen, and executed both in wood and stone in the best manner.
Strana 86 - ... architecture — has been here ; need I say more ? I wound myself up to the pitch to bear the sight of the havoc he had committed. Of course here his old trick of throwing the Lady Chapel into the choir by pulling down the altar-screen ; then he has pewed the choir and walled up the arches of the choir, making the aisles nothing but dark passages.
Strana 164 - It is very necessary, therefore, that all those who have felt sorrow at this should know at once that he is not a great architect, but one of the smallest possible or conceivable architects : and that by his own account and setting forth of himself. Hear him : " I believe, as regards architecture, few men have been so unfortunate as myself. I have passed my life in thinking of fine things, studying fine things, designing fine things, and realising very poor ones.
Strana 225 - I have now seen Rome and what Italian architecture can do," he wrote,1 "and I do not hesitate to say that it is an imperative duty on every Catholic to defend true and Christian architecture with his whole energy. The modern churches here are frightful ; St. Peter's is far more ugly than I expected, and vilely constructed — a mass of imposition...
Strana 163 - Oh ! then, what delight ! what joy unspeakable ! when one of the solemn piles is presented to them, in all its pristine life and glory ! — the stoups are filled to the brim ; the rood is raised on high ; the screen glows with sacred imagery and rich device ; the niches are filled ; the altar is replaced, sustained by sculptured shafts, the relics of the saints repose beneath, the body of Our Lord is enshrined on its consecrated stone ; the lamps of the sanctuary burn bright ; the saintly portraitures...
Strana 315 - Let us remember to his honour that, if now there seems to be the dawn of a better architecture, if our edifices seem to be more correct in taste, more genuine in material, more honest in construction, and more sure to last, it was he who first showed us that our architecture offended not only against the laws of beauty, but also against the laws of morality.
Strana 226 - Christian antiquities, it would be unbearable — the Sistine Chapel is a melancholy room, the Last Judgment is a painfully muscular delineation of a glorious subject, the Scala Regia a humbug, the Vatican a hideous mass, and St. Peter's is the greatest failure of all. It is quite painful to walk about ; Italian architecture is a mere system of veneering marble slabs...
Strana 333 - The two great rules for design are these: 1st, that there should be no features about a building which are not necessary for convenience, construction, or propriety; 2nd, that all ornament should consist of enrichment of the essential construction of the building.
Strana 285 - The picturesque effect of the ancient buildings results from the ingenious methods by which the old builders overcame local and constructive difficulties.