Bernini is Dead?: Architecture and the Social Purpose |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 88
Page 59
... elements correctly , and then having arranged them efficiently with respect to each other and with great clarity as to the circulation between them . Since the general attitude of the day ( not particularly to be blamed on the methods ...
... elements correctly , and then having arranged them efficiently with respect to each other and with great clarity as to the circulation between them . Since the general attitude of the day ( not particularly to be blamed on the methods ...
Page 147
... elements of these magnificent build- ings are vestigial much in the sense that the triglyphs and guttae of the ... elements is therefore any longer functionally necessary . But as Tange says : They became indispensable elements for the ...
... elements of these magnificent build- ings are vestigial much in the sense that the triglyphs and guttae of the ... elements is therefore any longer functionally necessary . But as Tange says : They became indispensable elements for the ...
Page 381
... elements which threatened it - thus , for example , the search for only tripartite naves , the uniform bay , or complete analogy between nave , transept , and chevet . A third principle , that of distinctness and deductive cogency ...
... elements which threatened it - thus , for example , the search for only tripartite naves , the uniform bay , or complete analogy between nave , transept , and chevet . A third principle , that of distinctness and deductive cogency ...
Contents
Chapter Three ARCHITECTURAL TRAVEL WITH PARTICULAR | 35 |
Chapter Six THE ARCHITECTURE OF STONE | 151 |
English Features | 417 |
Copyright | |
9 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic aisles Amiens ancient apse arcades arches archi architect architecture Baroque basilica beautiful Bernini Borromini Bourges brick building built buttresses Byzantine carved cathedral central century Chapel Chartres choir churches classic color columns Copán corbel cross decoration dome Egyptian English enormous example facade feet France French frieze gable Gothic Greek Hagia Sophia hall Hatshepsut Ibid important interior Isfahan Islamic Islamic architecture Italian later less lintel look marble masonry Mayan Monte Albán monuments mosaics mosque Mycenae nave Notre-Dame OMIKRON painting Palace Paris Parthenon perhaps Peter's piers portal problem Propylaea pyramid Reims Renaissance ribs Roman Romanesque Rome roof Saint Saqqara sculpture shrine side Sigfried Giedion space square stone structure style tecture temple Teotihuacán things tion tombs tower transept triglyphs urban Uxmal vaults vertical wall west front wooden York Zoser
References to this book
The Genius in the Design: Bernini, Borromini, and the Rivalry That ... Jake Morrissey,J. P. Morrissey No preview available - 2005 |