Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Butterfield Architectural Drawing for Keble College Block No 2. No 5. Elevations. Butterfield. The original buildings of the College were designed by William Butterfield (1814-1900). Although the darling of the Tractarian movement, Butterfield was a controversial choice, as his style (a form of High Victorian Gothic) had long provoked argument ...

  2. 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

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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 ...

  6. William Butterfield. Arquitecto inglés nacido en Londres. Sus iglesias y casas parroquiales fueron el centro de su trabajo, todas ellas atribuibles al estilo neogótico. Fue asistente del arquitecto Harvey Eginton, con el que completó su enseñanza.

  7. William Butterfield Collection (023), Architect, 1814-1900 British architect William Butterfield was among the earliest and best-known proponents of Ruskinian constructional polychromy. A devout member of the Church of England, he completed much of his work under the patronage of the Ecclesiological Society and its supporters.