William Morris and the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings

前表紙
Routledge, 2007/12/12 - 178 ページ

The Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, founded by artist and craftsman William Morris in 1877, sought to preserve the integrity of historic buildings by preventing unnecessary repairs and additions. William Morris's intention and that of the SPAB, as outlined by the original manifesto, was that buildings of any period had a life that was best protected through the conservative repair of what was falling into ruin and the prevention of injury to buildings by safeguarding them as much as possible and practical. This practice became known as historic preservation. In this study, Donovan, relying upon many original documents from the SPAB archives in London, traces the history of the SPAB from it's foundation in nineteenth-century England to its current activities in England and Western Europe.

この書籍内から

目次

Chapter One Modern Preservation Techniques with Nineteenth Century Inspiration
1
Chapter Two The Architectural and Ideological Environment of the Nineteenth Century
15
Chapter Three William Morris His Attitude toward the Gothic Revival and the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings
39
Chapter Four The SPAB in Britain
64
Chapter Five The SPAB in France and Germany in the Nineteenth Century
89
Chapter Six SPAB Activities and Influences in the Twentieth Century
105
Notes
125
Annotated Bibliography
151
Bibliography
155
Index
165
著作権

他の版 - すべて表示

多く使われている語句

書誌情報