Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 51
pro vyhledávání: '"James F. O'Gorman"'
Autor:
James F. O'Gorman
When Isaiah Rogers died in 1869, the Cincinnati Daily Times noted that'in his profession he was, perhaps, better known than any other person in the country.'Yet until now there has been no study that fully examines his remarkable, influential, and in
Autor:
Renée Tribert, James F. O’Gorman
Gervase Wheeler was an English-born architect who designed such important American works as the Henry Boody House in Brunswick, Maine; the Patrick Barry House in Rochester, New York; and the chapels at Bowdoin and Williams colleges. But he was perhap
Autor:
James F. O’Gorman
Winner of the Historic New England Book Prize (2009)Winner of the Henry-Russell Hitchcock Book Award (2010)Henry Austin's (1804–1891) works receive consideration in books on nineteenth-century architecture, yet no book has focused scholarly attenti
Autor:
James F. O'Gorman
Publikováno v:
The New England Quarterly. 84:528-530
Autor:
James F. O'Gorman
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 54:278-301
The head-scratching reaction of the average tourist to the National Monument to the Forefathers at Plymouth, Massachusetts, measures the degree to which the present age has lost contact with the allegorical and iconographical meanings of older public
Autor:
James F. O'Gorman
Publikováno v:
Winterthur Portfolio. 37:179-181
Autor:
James F. O'Gorman
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 52:360-362
Autor:
James F. O'Gorman
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 50:192-194
SOME OF THE conclusions reached by John Frew in his recent article, "Bulfinch on Gothic,"' must be revised in light of the following facts. The sketch of the church at Acre published by Charles A. Place,2 which Frew described as "lost," is in fact pr
Autor:
Kenneth Hafertepe, James F. O'Gorman
Since the Renaissance, architects have been authors and architecture has been the subject of publications. Architectural forms and theories are spread not just by buildings, but by the distribution of images and descriptions fed through the printing