English:
Identifier: lutyenshousesga00weav (find matches)
Title: Lutyens houses and gardens
Year: 1921 (1920s)
Authors: Weaver, Lawrence, 1876-1930
Subjects: Lutyens, Edwin Landseer, Sir, 1869-1944 Architecture, Domestic Gardens
Publisher: London, Offices of "Country life", ltd. (etc.) New York, C. Scribner's Sons
Contributing Library: University of Connecticut Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation
View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.
Text Appearing Before Image:
H SBO S WXH % O >OSWHH< w PuEV w XH H W O w KH gO w H< O Wfc ctf<!fac/) l-H o L.H.G. 7 3650 82 Walter Pater on Bases 55
Text Appearing After Image:
PLAN AT LOTTO? BATTERY ^^^4—r r , r r r r r^- 58.—Plans of Lindisfarne Castle. drawn to the delightful treatment of the bases of the new-hall columns, which die away into the floor. They emphasizeSir Edwins skill in giving a new significance to old forms.Walter Pater wrote in Notre Dame dAmiens : Themassive square pillars of a Romanesque church, harshlyangular, obstruct, sometimes cruelly, the standing, themovements of a multitude of persons. To carry such amultitude conveniently round them is the matter-of-factmotive of the gradual chiselling away, the softening of theangles, the graceful compassing of the Gothic base, till inour own Perpendicular period it all but disappears. Fig.60 shows that at Lindisfarne this lessening of the base iscarried still further, and only enough remains to avoid theharshness of a baseless column, and to establish the organicrelation between floor and pillar. From the hall a doorleads to the foot of the old stone stair which ascends to theupper batte
Note About Images
Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.