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Drawing Architecture - perfect Christmas gift!

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Just in time for the Christmas shopping season Phaidon has released a book perfect for the architecture lover on your list,  Drawing Architecture by Helen Thomas .  Above is a recent rendering by Grafton Architects done with computer software in 2013. Unlike most computer renderings, notice how soft and beautiful it is.  This transforms what is ordinarily a cold lifeless drawing into an art form; I'd hang this on my wall! Showcasing over 250 drawings by architects from Bernini to Frank Gehry and Michelangelo to Renzo Piano, the book highlights how styles have changed but the way architecture is represented has mostly stayed the same.  Above is a sketch completed by set designer Ferdinando Galli da Bibiena in 1732 of a piece of scenery for the baroque stage. Notice the clever way the elevation and plan are represented together. Lastly I wanted to share a rendering from 1939 by architect  Ernesto Bruno la Padula of one of my favorite buildings in Rome, the Pala...

Interior Landmarks - Treasures of New York

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 Everyone is familiar with the many landmarks of New York City, but thanks to Judith Gura and Kate Wood (courtesy of the Monacelli Press) we are all about to become familiar with the landmarked INTERIORS of the city.  Since 1965 the New York City Landmarks Law has been protecting significant spaces across the city ranging from classical architecture to more unexpected masterpieces of the modern era. This book includes 120 landmarks and their locations which can be used as an architectural tour guide of the city as most spaces are open to the public. The projects range from the expected such as the Metropolitan Museum  by Richard Morris Hunt seen below -  To the lesser known such as the Loews Paradise Theater in the Bronx by John Eberson . The re-release of this book includes updated information with new additions so that you can explore these landmarks for yourself. I think a copy of this book is a must-have guide to the city with more interesting venues than...

Private Classical Baltimore home tour this weekend!

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This upcoming weekend I'm helping to host a home tour in Baltimore for our local chapter of the ICAA which I've decided to name Private Classical Baltimore .  Read here for a little information about this tour which I'm so excited for! The tour starts at the Homewood Mansion on Johns Hopkins University campus.  Built and designed by Charles Carroll Jr. for his family in 1801, the house has a Palladian 5-part plan. While planned and massed in the Georgian style of the time, it uses Federal-style detailing reflecting the influences of Robert Adam. The flatter details seen here distinguish the federal style from the English Georgian style and this is considered one of the best federal examples in the country.  Lunch will be served as part of the tour in the garden, weather permitting. After lunch the tour will progress to 2 beautiful historic houses in the Homeland neighborhood. The stone house seen here was designed by Palmer & Lamdin in 1928. They were the preeminent r...

Dior and his Decorators - a must have for any design library!

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To this day Christian Dior's name is associated with all that is elegant despite his passing 61 years ago. The post-war period in which he was most active is personally one of my favorite times to study as the output of the western world's artists was at a creative peak (similarly the same could be said of the inter-war period). Historian Maureen Footer has just released the book I have always wanted to read and it does not disappoint, Dior and his Decorators: Victor Grandpierre, Georges Geffroy, and the New Look .  While Dior may be a household name the artists working behind him, inspiring him, and sometimes providing him with his eponymous look aren't as well known.  As a reader of this blog you are probably already familiar with Ms Footer's previous book, George Stacey and the Creation of American Chic (also a must have!), and this book picks up where that left off by delving into the most chic interiors of the 20th century. On a side note, have you seen Ms. Foote...

The grand Willard Hotel DC, some historical surprises

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Most people here in DC know of the Willard : one of the grand dame hotels of the city which one assumes have been there forever. However what most probably don't know (I for one did not) is that the current hotel is actually mostly a recreation of the historic space! We recently hosted a tour of the hotel with our ICAA chapter and the hotel historian had some eye opening surprises for us. Many of the beautiful details which appear to date to the hotel's rebuilding in 1901 when the beaux arts style hotel was built actually date to 1986! Lets back up here. Yes the hotel is historic. Like many hotels however it has been renovated and rebuilt almost continuously since its founding in 1818 (the year is a stretch but is when a hotel was first built on this site). Above is the lobby as it appeared in 1950. One recognizes the overall space but decoration and mid-centuryisms are the focus. And above is how the lobby appeared in 1984! This area of Washington suffered greatly during the...