Showing posts with label architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label architecture. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Weathered Stone


Weathered stones in the wall of St. Mary's Parish Church on Lindisfarne.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Pugin's Rules of Architecture


Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812-1852)
Image via Wikipedia
"The two great rules for design are these:

1st, that there should be no features about a building which are not necessary for convenience, construction, or propriety;

2nd, that all ornament should consist of enrichment of the essential construction of the building." - Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812-52)
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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Library Raid

Cover of "Wolfwatching"
Cover of Wolfwatching
A large haul as I'm expecting it to be rather quiet in the next few weeks....

Cathedrals in Britain and Ireland - William Anderson & Clive Hicks

The History of Christianity - Jonathan Hill

Wolfwatching - Ted Hughes

Churches and Cathedrals - Helen and Richard Leacroft

A Hundred Doors - Michael Longley

English Parish Churches - Edwin Smith, Olive Cook, Graham Hutton

Catholicism - Peter Stanford

A Practical View of Christianity - William Wilberforce

Sorry to anyone else in Ilkley wishing to study Christianity or church architecture, I think I grabbed the lot.
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Education Ups and Downs and Ups

Roman Catholic Cathedral Church of St.Chad, bu...
St. Chad's Cathedral, designed by Pugin
I set off on AA100 - The Arts Past and Present like a rocket, getting a really great score for my first pair of essays on Plutarch's view of the relationship between Antony and Cleopatra, and comparing and contrasting the painting styles of Cezanne and Zurburan.  The second essay should have scored more points, in theory, as it was a re-write of one of the first essays, I chose the Plutarch one.  I mucked up on the bibliography and referencing though which cost me points and left me with a lower score then the original essay.  A bit of a downer then.

In the run up to Christmas and New Year I was doing 80 hour weeks and so the little time I had for studying was fractured and at the wrong ends of the day.  Getting your head into your course books after a 15 hour shift is never going to garner any great results.

I sat down yesterday morning to get to grips with my current pair of essays, comparing the reputation of Michael Faraday from two different sources, and comparing and examining two poems ostensibly about cats.  An hour after starting I was almost sat with my head in my hands, my notes from the last month were hugely disorganised, written here and there on bits of paper with underscores and crossings out in abandon.  This then was my lowest ebb for the course so far. 

I had a quick flick around the Facebook groups, saw lots of other folk mentioning the same time problems and even worse, another course colleague had bitten the dust. Left. Quit. Dropped out.

Can't do that, I'm too Yorkshire.  I've paid for this course out of my own pocket so I'm determined to wring value from it. A couple of hours yesterday and then a solid four hour stint today and I had dragged my copious but random notes into some sort of coherent form and produced two essays complete with references and bibliography.

That's me back in the groove then.  I don't think these are the best essays I have done, I have a slight concern I haven't balanced the dual question in one quite enough, but they are done and with that I can press on with Pugin and the revival of Gothic architecture in English churches.

I have had a look to see what the next essay is, a choice between examining tradition and dissent in either the Roman Catholic church in England, or the music of Dmitri Shostakovich, and the word count is doubled to 1,200.  I have not yet done the work on Shostakovich, but I'm taking an early decision and have been to the library to raid it for background material on Catholicism.

Now then, another hour or two studying before I cook dinner, I'm a happy little student again.
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Friday, July 1, 2011

Independence, Freedom: I like it.

Independence is Good. I like it.


virtual capitol:   http://www.aoc.gov/index.cfm

architect of the capitol:   http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/freedom_1.cfm

Heroes HERE

or, if you prefer you can look at what is happening in a
not free country, e.g., iran:
HERE  and HERE

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Guggenheim Reflections

Museo Guggenheim BilbaoImage via WikipediaAll art is about reflecting various aspects of life, and in the physical construction of the Guggenheim we see that the museum itself reflects everything - Yorkshire Soul.
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Sunday, May 15, 2011

Postmodern Architecture

The "Art Ladder", the main staircase...Image via Wikipedia[Postmodern characteristics] “elements that are hybrid rather than ‘pure’, compromising rather than ‘clear’, distorted rather than ‘straightforward’, ambiguous rather than ‘articulated’, perverse as well as ‘impersonal’, conventional rather than ‘designed’, accommodating rather than ‘excluding’, redundant rather than simple, vestigial as well as innovating, inconsistent and equivocal rather than direct and clear” – Robert Venturi.


Robert Venturi, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture.


The photograph shows "The "Art Ladder", the main staircase of the original Robert Venturi portion of the Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Washington. The visible statues are Chinese funerary statues: two rams and a civilian guardian" - from Wikipedia.


Post-Modernism

guggenheimImage by Fran Simó via Flickr“The ideas behind post-modernism are probably most clearly expressed through architectural theory” – Mary Acton
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The photo shows a view of the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao designed by the architect Frank Gehry.