Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 10 de jul. de 2023 · William Butterfield, Marble pavement. Plan and side elevation for the floors of the chancel, transepts, and lower vestry of All Saints’ Church, Babbacombe, 1872. RIBA Drawings Collection. Butterfield had pioneered the revival of decorated encaustic tile for paving churches in the 1840s.

  2. 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 ...

  3. 8 de sept. de 2023 · William Butterfield was a leading figure in the Gothic Revival movement in the 19th century. All Saints is widely regarded as his masterpiece. Whereas previous Gothic architecture of the period broadly copied medieval buildings, Butterfield took the style into new directions. His use of brick and application of polychromy (decorating in a range ...

  4. William Butterfield was a Gothic Revival architect and associated with the Oxford Movement.

  5. 6 de dic. de 2017 · William Butterfield. Nothing Permitted But What Has Been Foreseen. William Butterfield eschewed the illustrative perspective, preferring instead to develop even his studies as contract drawings that would serve three tasks: as presentations through which a project could be comprehended, as instructions from which his contractors and clients ...

  6. 10 de mar. de 2017 · William Butterfield. His commission for the Ecclesiological model church in Margaret Street made Butterfield almost immediately one of the major architects of the mid-century. — Paul Thompson (1971)

  7. 11 de jun. de 2018 · Butterfield, William (1814–1900). One of the most prolific and original English Gothic Revivalists, he was born in London, for a while worked with the Inwoods, and opened his own practice in 1840. From 1842 he was closely involved with the Cambridge Camden (later Ecclesiological) Society, contributing designs to The Ecclesiologist (1842–68 ...