[4b92d] *R.e.a.d# %O.n.l.i.n.e! Frank Furness: Architecture in the Age of the Great Machines - George E. Thomas %ePub~
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Jun 27, 2019 frank furness: architecture in the age of the great machines.
In the 40 years between the rice/warren double house and the last surviving furness, 222 washington square, the field of architecture went through manifest change. Fraser, furness, and hewitt became furness and hewitt after fraser left to become a major government architect in 1871.
Nov 7, 2012 the architect, unlike any other category of artist, cannot begin to create until the frank furness's pennsylvania academy of the fine arts building in of course, many pariahs of the victorian age were rehabilit.
It’s estimated that he designed nearly 200 buildings, residences, churches, banks, and more between 1878 and 1906, but many of them.
Pa books: “frank furness: architecture in the age of the great machines” frank furness (1839-1912) has remained a curiosity to architectural historians and critics, somewhere between an icon and an enigma, whose importance and impact have yet to be properly evaluated or appreciated.
Frank furness (1839-1912) among the major architects who helped give shape to victorian philadelphia was frank furness. In the years following the civil war, furness and his associates dotted the philadelphia landscape with a remarkable group of buildings ranging from factories and warehouses to schools, hospitals, banks, railroad stations, and private residences.
They are the dynamism of the 19th century industrial age writ in stone and brick and have no patience for equipose and pleasing proportions. Furness's posts are not so much columns in the classical tradition as they are little pistons, compressed to their extreme, ready to thrust upward and send the rest of the building skyward.
Frank furness (american, 1839–1912) was the leading architect in philadelphia during the second half of the nineteenth century. Working in a city known as the “workshop of the world,” furness turned away from contemporary european historical forms to design buildings out of the materials and formal vocabulary of the industrial revolution.
Frank furness was the most unique and prolific american architect of the nineteenth century.
Frank furness (1839-1912), a prolific and acclaimed architect who embraced the materials and vocabulary of the industrial age, designed hundreds of buildings.
His modernism--and frank furness'--is not merely a theory, but a mirror held up to society. --alan hess, from the foreword, by returning frank furness to his central position at the birth of modern architecture in america, george thomas helps us understand the depth of the american roots of modernism.
Frank furness, the acclaimed prolific philadelphia architect, was among the major architects who helped give shape to victorian philadelphia. After serving as a captain in the cavalry during the civil war, he and his associates dotted the philadelphia landscape with a remarkable group of buildings—from factories and warehouses to schools, hospitals, banks, railroad stations and private residences.
Built in 1882, it needed to be expanded only a few years later. Philadelphia's leading architect, frank furness, designed the 10-story office tower and station of brick with terra cotta ornament,.
Thomas/hess, frank furness: architecture in the age of the great machines (hc 2018, pb jun 2021, eb 2018) trask, things american: art museums and civic culture in the progressive era (pb 2013, eb 2011) tunnard/hunt, gardens in the modern landscape: a facsimile of the revised 1948 edition (pb 2014, eb 2014).
Furness was philadelphia’s most important and prolific architect of the gilded age, roughly those years ofenormous economic growth between the end of the civil war and the beginning of the 20th century.
It’s estimated that he designed nearly 200 buildings residences, churches, banks, and more between 1878 and 1906, but many of them.
Frank furness (1839-1912) has remained a curiosity to architectural historians and critics, somewhere between an icon and an enigma, whose importance and impact have yet to be properly evaluated or appreciated.
Frank furness was the most unique and prolific american architect of the nineteenth century. Apprenticed in the atelier of richard morris hunt and inspired by the versus of his father's friend, ralph waldo emerson, furness derived architectural form from the representation of purpose and turned architecture away from history toward the forces of the present.
Apr 7, 2017 - explore andrejs penikis's board frank furness architecture on pinterest.
Moved here in the 1880s, it was originally exhibited at the 1876 centennial exhibition to promote connecticut brownstone as a building material. Page from philadelphia and its environs, 1887 today, the boat dock is long gone, the fountain has been plugged, and kelly drive is a four-lane highway.
His multilayered cultural biography of the architect frank furness—best remembered for the pennsylvania academy of fine arts (opened in 1876)—not only gives due credence to philadelphia as the industrial powerhouse of victorian america but also demonstrates how furness collaborated with the city's manufacturing elites to build an urban environment that celebrated the second industrial revolution.
1887) shows a plan and a massing of volumes close to the library as built—a stair tower separating vertical circulation from the reading room and stacks; a building featuring an apsidal north end with an arc of seminar rooms clustered around the base of the apse (like side chapels of a basilica).
Awarded a 2019 book award by the victorian society in america. Frank furness (1839-1912) has remained a curiosity to architectural historians and critics, somewhere between an icon and an enigma, whose importance and impact have yet to be properly evaluated or appreciated.
Frank furness produced architecture that has been described as idiosyncratic, boisterous, and even violent. Furness experienced the bloody destruction of the civil war as a cavalry commander.
Frank furness was the most unique and prolific american architect of the nineteenth century. Apprenticed in the atelier of richard morris hunt and inspired by the values of his father's friend, ralph waldo emerson, furness derived architectural form from the representation of purpose and turned architecture away from history toward the forces of the present.
Jun 23, 2008 furness designed more than 200 railroad buildings during and after the industrial “frank furness was the grandfather of american railroading on the east jcc programs benefit folks of all ages, including a pre-scho.
The alfred earnshaw house is generally believed to be the work of philadelphia architect frank furness because of its strong resemblance to some of his most distinctive houses of the 1870s. Its cross-gabled composition is found in furness’s emlen physick house at cape may, new jersey, as is the prominent flaring chimney.
The age of significant station construction declined with the rise of the automobile. A previous version of this article misspelled the names of frank furness and the architecture firm of reed.
Nov 12, 2012 philadelphia: the great experiment webisode: frank furness documentary commemorating the life of visionary architect frank furness,.
Born: 11/12/1839, died: 6/30/1912 although long disdained for what was considered the eccentricity of his architectural designs, frank furness has in recent years enjoyed an immense popularity. William henry furness, frank furness was educated in private schools in the city.
Furness was a cofounder of the pennsylvania institute of architects in 1869. From 1875 on, furness moved away from european revival styles, looking instead to the american west and to the american industrial age as inspirations for his dynamic and original buildings. He found an appreciative audience in industrial philadelphia.
Frank furness (1839-1912) has remained a curiosity to architectural historians and critics, somewhere between an icon and an enigma, whose importance and impact have yet to be properly evaluated or appreciated. To some, his work pushed pattern and proportion to extremes, undermining or forcing together the historic styles he referenced in such eclectic buildings as the pennsylvania academy of the fine arts and the university of pennsylvania library.
Aug 18, 2010 the word “architect” derives from the latin “architectus,” itself derived frank furness designed the original building of the bryn mawr philadelphia's industrial-realist culture of the post-civil war period,”.
Frank furness philadelphia 1880s frank furness produced architecture that has been described as idiosyncratic, boisterous, and even violent. Furness experienced the bloody destruction of the civil war as a cavalry commander.
Furness produced some 1,000 projects and shaped students who would join him in transforming american architecture, such as louis sullivan, william price, and george howe, whose works would define the skylines of chicago, philadelphia, and atlantic city for the next century.
Frank furness' architectural legacy permeates southeastern pennsylvania. Furness was a man of his age, immersed in its most powerful currents and forces.
Furness, though, actually trained as an architect by learning a different style, popular in europe in the 19th century, known as neo-grec.
The eminent victorian frank furness (1839–1912) was the first great american architect after thomas jefferson and the first to design buildings that could, in any sense, be called original. Jefferson’s greek revival buildings were academically correct, but furness rejected eclecticism’s almost obligatory requirement that historic form and ornament be copied and adapted literally.
Sep 18, 2019 much of the architect's work met the wrecking ball in the 20th century. But a great deal of frank furness's buildings remain standing in philly.
He was educated at private schools in the city, but never attended a college or university.
Photo courtesy of the library of congress, prints and photographs division habs pa, si-phia 56609.
Book review presents reviews of recent publications on pennsylvania subjects by noted scholars, historians and journalists.
Supplied caption: black and white plate depicting the smoking room of frank furness, an architect.
Aug 31, 2012 in the case of architect frank furness (1839-1912), one can easily of the american industrial age; for example, he incorporated brick, iron,.
Ffrd looks to encourage genuine excitement and enthusiasm in the local community by recognizing the unique and historic value of the wilmington railroad station (1907-1908) and the cluster of frank furness railroad architecture at the riverfront.
These days, furness is celebrated as a pivotal figure in architecture — a “proto- modernist” who foresaw a new age of design before it dawned.
He designed almost 400 buildings, mostly in and around philadelphia, many of which are memorable, rather fierce, and full of character.
Frank furness (1839-1912), a prolific and acclaimed architect who embraced the materials and vocabulary of the industrial age, designed hundreds of buildings in the philadelphia region.
Frank furness, architect pennsylvania academy of fine arts (pafa), 1876 photo: gutekunst descendents of frank furness, the great 19th century philadelphia architect, were emphatic. It’s not pronounced fur-ness, it’s furness as in “furnace”. No matter how you say it furness sometimes “can’t get no respect. ” during his lifetime he completed some 1,000 projects yet too many of those distinctive works were callously demolished by his own hometown.
Jan 30, 2013 michael lewis' frank furness: architecture and the violent mind has middle ages, in city of gold: the archaeology of polis chrysochous,.
Oct 6, 2012 sullivan in 1873; furness in space: the architect and design dialogues on railroads; building a masterpiece: frank furness'.
May 20, 2019 his topic was the wartime exploits of frank furness, whose name is often thumbprints are all over the architecture of 19th century philadelphia. However at age 22 he was socially eligible to join rush's lance.
Architect frank furness (1839–1912) and cabinetmaker daniel pabst (1826–1910), generally considered “victorian” figures, nevertheless drew upon the ideas of their english contemporaries, design reformers owen jones (1809–74) and christopher dresser (1834–1904)—dresser had attended the centennial and lectured in philadelphia—in their emphasis on stylized, organic ornamental schemes.
Frank furness, the architect of the pennsylvania academy of the fine arts and son of the church's first minister, designed the current church building. Begun in 1883, and dedicated in 1885, it was completed in 1886. The tall pyramidal tower/ porte cochere at the church's southeast corner was removed in the early 20th century.
Dec 4, 2017 in a recent post, i mentioned my fascination with the architectural cornice. Throughout philadelphia, in all neighborhoods and on buildings.
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