Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  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. Finding aid for the William Butterfield architectural and design drawings, 1838-1896, undated 850998. Alan Tomlinson and J. Gibbs. Special Collections. 2006. 1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 1100. Los Angeles 90049-1688. Business Number: (310) 440-7390. Fax Number: (310) 440-7780. reference@getty.edu.

  3. 4 de ene. de 2011 · Butterfield's bold experiments with polychromy had major importance. As Paul Thompson explains, “As the test case of Ruskin's theory, All Saints' in a sense influenced all the innumerable examples of constructional colour which marked the remainder of the nineteenth century spreading gradually outwards to the furthest corners of European influence and downwards through the social layers of ...

  4. William Butterfield died in 1900 and was buried in Tottenham Cemetery, Haringey. His house in Bedford Square, London, has been recognised with a blue plaque which simply states 'William Butterfield, 1814-1900, Architect lived here'. It seems a shame that a man who so influenced architecture throughout the Victorian era is so little remembered.

  5. William Butterfield. William Butterfield (* 17. September 1814 in London; † 23. Februar 1900 ebenda) war ein englischer Architekt. Seine Bauten sind dem neugotischen Stil zuzurechnen (Gothic Revival), wobei vor allem Kirchen und Pfarrhäuser im Zentrum seines Schaffens stehen. Butterfield war eng verbunden mit dem im 19.

  6. Butterfield, William (1814–1900), architect, the son of William Butterfield, by his wife Ann, daughter of Robert Stevens, was born in the parish of St. Clement Danes, London, on 7 Sept. 1814. His first architectural education was received in an office at Worcester, where a sympathetic head clerk of archæological tastes encouraged him in ...

  7. William Butterfield was born in London, England on 7 September 1814. In c.1830 he was apprenticed to Thomas Arbor, a builder in Pimlico, London. Two years later he began training as an architect and was articled to Edward Lushington Blackburne (1803-1888) in London.