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  1. Augustus Charles Pugin (Parigi, 1796? – Bloomsbury, 19 dicembre 1832) è stato un architetto e disegnatore francese. Joseph Nash, Ritratto di Augustus ...

  2. 20 de jun. de 2016 · Drawing of the 'Estimates' design for the House of Lords by Pugin. ImageCourtesy of Yale University Press. Although Barry’s initial proposal, with drawings by Augustus Pugin, made a large enough ...

  3. Ejemplos de Arquitectura Gótica, Augustus Charles Pugin. [Examples of Gothic Architecture] Obra ideada e iniciada por el arquitecto, cuyo primer volumen se publicó en Londres en 1831, y que fue completada por su hijo A. Welby Northmore Pugin que publicó los dos restantes en 1836, Una segunda edición sa­lió en Londres en 1850. Pugin ...

  4. 22 de feb. de 2023 · Augustus Pugin, an expert in the Gothic style, submitted his designs under the names of other architects, as his conversion to Catholicism made his designs unsuitable. Pugin won the competition, and he and architect Charles Barry collaborated on the new design.

  5. Edward Welby Pugin (11 March 1834 – 5 June 1875) was an English architect, the eldest son of architect Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin and Louisa Barton and part of the Pugin & Pugin family of church architects. His father was an architect and designer of Neo-Gothic architecture, and after his death in 1852 Edward took up his practice.

  6. The Royal Institute of British Architects. Augustus Charles Pugin (1769–1832) was the father of the more well known A. W. N. Pugin. Born in France, little is known of his early life but he probably came to England around 1792 where he entered the Royal Academy Schools and then worked as a draughtsman for John Nash, at that time based in Wales.

  7. 21 de may. de 2018 · Pugin, Augustus Charles. Pugin, Augustus Charles (1769–1832). French-born, he came to Wales during the French Revolution. He became an assistant to Nash, and made his reputation as a draughtsman, drawing and etching plates for Rudolph Ackermann (1764–1834), John Britton (1771–1857), Edward Wedlake Brayley (1773–1854), and other publishers.