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Eclectic Odyssey of Atlee B. Ayers, Architect [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 289x218x19 mm, kaal: 2450 g, 11 colour & 43 b&w photographs, 20 line drawings, bibliography, index
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Aug-2001
  • Kirjastus: Texas A & M University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1585441228
  • ISBN-13: 9781585441228
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 289x218x19 mm, kaal: 2450 g, 11 colour & 43 b&w photographs, 20 line drawings, bibliography, index
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Aug-2001
  • Kirjastus: Texas A & M University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1585441228
  • ISBN-13: 9781585441228
Teised raamatud teemal:
Atlee B. Ayres was one of the most prominent Texas architects of the early twentieth century. In a career spanning more than seventy years, Ayres was involved in more than five hundred architectural projects, principally in San Antonio and South Texas, but also in Kansas, Oklahoma, and New York. His architectural successes include distinguished public buildings such as San Antonio's first skyscraper, the Smith Young Tower, as well as private homes, businesses, churches, and five buildings on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin.

However, it was in the houses he designed that the influences of the refined eclecticism for which Ayres became known are most evident. In the beautifully illustrated The Eclectic Odyssey of Atlee B. Ayres, Architect, author Robert James Coote focuses on Ayres's early-twentieth-century residential architecture and the sources from which he drew inspiration. During the three decades Coote examines, Ayres designed nearly two hundred homes in the fashionable San Antonio suburbs of Monte Vista, Olmos Park, and Terrell Hills, homes that even now rank among the most charming in the area.

Ayres's eclectic search for inspiration and guidance from buildings of many times and places, American and European, provides a window on the issue of style—an issue that continues to interest those who design houses as well as those who experience them. Coote studies in detail twenty-five of Ayres's houses, not only as representative of styles, but also as architectural compositions—their plans, spaces, exteriors, materials, and structure.

Coote has mined an extraordinary collection of drawings, specifications, office correspondence, and photographs of Ayres's buildings to write this insightful treatment of an important architect and the influences that made him both an exemplar of his times and an unusually fine practitioner of eclecticism.
Illustrations
vii
Preface ix
An Eclectic Inheritance
3(6)
Architectural Education: New York, 1892--94
9(10)
Foreign Travels: England and Western Europe, 1911; Around the World, 1914; Spain and Italy, 1921 and 1928; Mexico, 1924
19(11)
``In Love with California'' 1919, 1923, 1926, 1929
30(8)
Florida
38(6)
Ayres's Library
44(9)
Ayres and the Magazines: The Clippings Files and Publicity
53(13)
Ayres Houses: Eclectic Experiments, 1898--1923: Colonial Revival, Mission, Prairie, Tudor Revival, Arts and Crafts Styles
66(18)
Mediterranean Style I, 1918--31: Italian Renaissance Style
84(13)
English Interlude, 1923
97(4)
Mediterranean Style II, 1924--31: Spanish Style
101(24)
Neoclassical Mansions, 1931--38
125(6)
Postscript: Post-1945 Varieties of Eclecticism
131(8)
Selected List of Ayres Houses 139(2)
Representative Plans of Ayres Houses 141(16)
Notes 157(6)
Glossary 163(4)
Bibliography 167(4)
Index 171