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  1. 2 de mar. de 2019 · Since Keble was founded by Butterfield's pious High Church friends for clerical students, the chapel, which was added to the group in 1873-6, understandably dominates the whole. Tall and richly decorated, this has many of Butterfield's virtues, but it quite lacks the directness and the poignance of his best work of the fifties and early sixties.

  2. William Butterfield (ur. 7 września 1814 w Londynie, zm. 23 lutego 1900 tamże) – angielski architekt neogotycki. Życiorys. Projekty ...

  3. Butterfield's drawings and estimates partially document 25 architectural projects (churches, schools, and hospitals), and 67 drawings are designs for ecclesiastical objects. British architect. William Butterfield architectural and design drawings, 1838-1896 | Research Collections | Getty

  4. William Butterfield had little more than 100 square feet of real estate, but designed perhaps the greatest example of High Victorian Gothic architecture. The spire soars 227 feet above London and its interior is a kaleidoscope of color and pattern that expresses the vision of the Oxford Movement and the Ecclesiological Society.

    • 8 min
    • Beth Harris,Steven Zucker
  5. 10 ‘The Life and Work of William Butterfield’, Architect, 83 (1910), pp. 129-30 and 145-47 (pp. 145-46). Swinfen Harris refers (p. 145) to Butterfield’s ‘forceful methods as an admirable and voluminous correspondent; he not only wrote long and very scholarly letters, but every word of them had its due place, weight and measure most exactly apportioned’.

  6. William Butterfield. The son of a chemist, William Butterfield was born in London in 1814, one of nine children. His parents were strict non-conformists who ran a chemist's shop in the Strand. He was educated at a local school before being apprenticed to Thomas Arber, a builder in Pimlico, who later became bankrupt.

  7. Diplomatics and Instrumentality of the Drawing / William Butterfield. This film is part of series of posts of selected papers from the study symposium at Shatwell Farm, hosted by Drawing Matter and convened by KU Leuven and TU Delft on 27 and 28 April 2023. More about the symposium, and other films and written papers, can be found here.