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Accents as Well as Broad Effects
Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer
Mariana Griswold Van Rensselaer
其他書名
Writings on Architecture, Landscape, and the Environment, 1876-1925
出版
University of California Press
, 1996-01-01
主題
Architecture / History / General
History / Americas (North, Central, South, West Indies)
ISBN
0520201264
9780520201262
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=5W2P2T9YDkAC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Mariana Griswold Van Rensselaer (1851-1934) is highly regarded among architectural historians for her 1888 biography of the nineteenth-century architect Henry Hobson Richardson. Less well known are her writings on architecture, decorative art, gardening, and landscape design, works that provide a rare view of cities and rural environments in turn-of-the-century America. Now David Gebhard brings Van Rensselaer's significant writings together in one volume, including a chapter from the 1925 edition of
Art Out-of-Doors: Hints on Good Taste in Gardening
.
An established critic in environmental and literary circles, Van Rensselaer wrote for the general public in such journals as the
Century Magazine
and for a specialized audience of landscape architects in
Garden and Forest
. She was a long-time contributor to
The American Architect and Building News
, the first architectural journal in the United States. She is an engaging and accessible writer, and her articles on Frederick Law Olmsted and the Boston Public Library won great praise. Although the only woman in a field that was male-dominated at the time, Van Rensselaer was, curiously enough, opposed to women's suffrage.
David Gebhard provides an excellent introduction to this unusual woman and to her place in American architectural criticism. Van Rensselaer's writings are still of interest today, not only for her broad environmental approach, but also for her ability to relate abstract concepts to examples of harmonious design. Mariana Griswold Van Rensselaer (1851-1934) is highly regarded among architectural historians for her 1888 biography of the nineteenth-century architect Henry Hobson Richardson. Less well known are her writings on architecture, decorative art, gardening, and landscape design, works that provide a rare view of cities and rural environments in turn-of-the-century America. Now David Gebhard brings Van Rensselaer's significant writings together in one volume, including a chapter from the 1925 edition of
Art Out-of-Doors: Hints on Good Taste in Gardening
.
An established critic in environmental and literary circles, Van Rensselaer wrote for the general public in such journals as the
Century Magazine
and for a specialized audience of landscape architects in
Garden and Forest
. She was a long-time contributor to
The American Architect and Building News
, the first architectural journal in the United States. She is an engaging and accessible writer, and her articles on Frederick Law Olmsted and the Boston Public Library won great praise. Although the only woman in a field that was male-dominated at the time, Van Rensselaer was, curiously enough, opposed to women's suffrage.
David Gebhard provides an excellent introduction to this unusual woman and to her place in American architectural criticism. Van Rensselaer's writings are still of interest today, not only for her broad environmental approach, but also for her ability to relate abstract concepts to examples of harmonious design.