Neo classical
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The Science of Saving Venice OUT-OF-STOCK
94 pages, paperback, 246 x 211 mm portrait, 111 colour illustration, 3 b/ws
PRICE: £7.99
ISBN: 978884228477
Customers in the US or Canada, CLICK HERE
ByJane Da Mosto and Caroline Fletcher
The lagoon in which the city of Venice rises is no more than a few thousand years old - not much older than the city itself. And it may not last another hundred, such is the damage that not only the city but also the lagoon have suffered during the twentieth century. The lagoon was always a precarious and ultimately transient ecological phenomenon, and today both the city and the lagoon are under severe threat from human intervention and incursions on the one hand and on the other from climate change and natural erosion.
Especially since the Second World War, a great deal of data has been amassed about the lagoon and its ecology but it has remained the domain of specialists and lobbyists and it has not been collated until now. Working at the University of Venice and Churchill College, Cambridge, respectively, authors Jane Da Mosto and Caroline Fletcher have put together this important introduction to what is known, what is not known, what has been done and can be done to save both the city of Venice and the lagoon - for both need not only care and maintenance but also remedial treatment, or so the authors conclude.
This essential book, produced for the Venice in Peril Fund, and very reasonably priced so as to render it accessible, provides a sane and informative introduction to the problems of Venice's flooding, sinking and pollution. It also contains very new research. It also, naturally, discusses the pros and cons of what is to be done - should barriers be built? Is enough being done to protect the city and the lagoon?
This exhibition and catalogue celebrates the most gifted, inventive and eccentric amateurs of the 18th and early 19th centuries with a selection of drawings, engravings and portraits gathered from Soane's collection and other museums, archives and private houses around the country. More
The castle-style designs and picturesque landscape fantasies of Robert Adam are a much negelected aspect of his work. These paintings and sketches give a vivid scense of the beauty and allure of the landscapes and architecturally by which Adam was romantically fascinated, and which he recreated in some of his most significant commissions - or else on paper. More
John Soane died in 1837 but his legacy lives on in his architecture. Today architects across the world are inspired by his magical interiors. Four outstanding contemporary architects explore Sir John Soane's house and museum and identify works and motifs of his that have insired them or that they have specificaly referenced. More
Stowe House has been described as "the largest and most completely realised private neo-classical building in the world". The extraordinary family who built and re-built Stowe played a crucial role in the arts and politics of the Georgian age. Four prime ministers came from this or the closely related Pitt family, and with them and their house were associated a roll-call of artistic figures - to mention only Pope and Horace Walpole, Vanbrugh and Kent, Adam and Soane. More
Wotton has been dealt many blows and survived them all. Today it is a blossoming country house with the mark of Sir John Soane's essential reconstructions. Wotton's hardships and reconstructions are described and illustrated in a variety of ways. More
In the library of Sir John Soane’s remarkable house at 13, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, several volumes of Italian architectural drawings of the 16th and 17th centuries have remained until today one of London’s hidden treasures. They have never been catalogued before in detail. More