Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Barcode | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Non-fiction | Main Collection | NA 997 .L8 W55 2000 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Copy Type:01 - Books | Available | 624452 |
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NA 997 .F65 T7413 1995 Norman Foster / | NA 997 .G73 A4 2002 Graven Images / | NA 997 .H47 L93 1992 Imagination headquarters: Herron Associates / | NA 997 .L8 W55 2000 Sir Edwin Lutyens : designing in the English tradition / | NA 997 .M3 1990 Charles Rennie Mackintosh : the architectural papers / | NA 997 .M3 A2 2000 Charles Rennie Mackintosh : pocket guide / | NA 997 .M3 .A4 2000 Charles Rennie Mackintosh : architect, artist, icon / |
Published simultaneously in Great Britain by Pavilion Books Ltd., London.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 186) and index.
The Last Traditionalist -- Building With Wit -- Taste -- Places to Visit.
Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens (1869-1944) was arguably the greatest British architect of his age, renowned for his more than three hundred public buildings, monuments, and large country houses, many ideally set in exquisite gardens planned with his longtime collaborator and friend, landscape designer Gertrude Jekyll. What is less well known is that Lutyens also designed the furniture and interiors for most of his houses, from the doors and doorknobs to the chairs and chandeliers. This volume offers the first thorough examination of Lutyens's work in interior and furniture design, revealing its enduring relevance and appeal.
Rooted in the constructional integrity of the English Arts and Crafts movement but inspired by the pure logic of Classicism, Lutyens's genius can be seen in his ability to synthesize function and artistry in designs that are simple without being primitive and elegant without neglecting comfort. Elizabeth Wilhide traces the development of Lutyens's style and identifies the basic principles that informed his work, such as his finely tuned manipulation of space and light -- an outsize staircase steals space but evokes spaciousness; a circular cook's table is flooded with natural light from an enormous lantern window in the roof. Reflecting his flexible, inventive mind, Lutyens's furniture and interiors are, like many of his buildings, precise and seemingly traditional, yet at a second glance whimsical, individual, and always supremely liveable.
Illustrated throughout with specially commissioned and archival photographs of intact or restored interiors and gardens, original designs for furniture, and contemporary reinterpretations of the Lutyens style, this book, which includes a foreword by Lutyens's granddaughter, Candia Lutyens, provides a fresh insight into a rich and enduring design legacy.
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