Daniel Burnham and Louis Sullivan
Daniel Burnham and Louis Sullivan
Personal Histories of Two Icons of American Architecture
Thoreson, Trygve
University of Illinois Press
03/2026
344
Mole
Inglês
9780252089183
Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição
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Chapter 1 Uncle Dan, Beloved Master
Chapter 2 1846-1850s: "There Was a Child Went Forth"
Chapter 3 1860s: Pathways
Chapter 4 1870s: Apprenticeship
Chapter 5 1880s: Fruition
Chapter 6 1890s: Triumph
Chapter 7 1900s: Divergence
Chapter 8 1910-1924: Downward to Darkness
Epilogue Take a Walk with Me Down Michigan Avenue
Notes
Select Bibliography
Chapter 2 1846-1850s: "There Was a Child Went Forth"
Chapter 3 1860s: Pathways
Chapter 4 1870s: Apprenticeship
Chapter 5 1880s: Fruition
Chapter 6 1890s: Triumph
Chapter 7 1900s: Divergence
Chapter 8 1910-1924: Downward to Darkness
Epilogue Take a Walk with Me Down Michigan Avenue
Notes
Select Bibliography
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Adler and Sullivan; architectural firm; Dankmar Adler; personal life; biography; biographical; sketch; Owen Aldis; American Institute of Architects; William Peirce Anderson; Pierce; Art Institute; Chicago; Auditorium Building; Beaux Arts; Edward Bennett; traditionalist; collaboration process; collaboration; friendships; John Wellborn Root; habits; family; parents; personality; Edwin Burnham; wife; spouse; children; Elizabeth Weeks Burnham; Margaret Sherman Burnham; Burnham and Root; Chicago architecture; Chicago buildings; D. H. Burnham and Company; John Edelmann; Ralph Waldo Emerson; Evanston; Thomas Hines; blueprint; Richard Morris Hunt; William Le Baron Jenney; Lincoln Memorial; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; MIT; Francis Davis Millet; Monadnock Building; Harriet Monroe; Charles Moore; organic; organic architecture; Plan of Chicago; plans; Railway Exchange Building; Henry Hobson Richardson; Schlesinger and Mayer; skyscraper; Albert Sullivan; mental illness; alcoholism; education; beliefs; architectural forms; architectural theories; Patrick Sullivan; Thomas Tallmadge; Robert Twombly; Wainwright Building; Washington; D.C.; Western Association of Architects; history of architecture; World’s Columbian Exposition
Chapter 1 Uncle Dan, Beloved Master
Chapter 2 1846-1850s: "There Was a Child Went Forth"
Chapter 3 1860s: Pathways
Chapter 4 1870s: Apprenticeship
Chapter 5 1880s: Fruition
Chapter 6 1890s: Triumph
Chapter 7 1900s: Divergence
Chapter 8 1910-1924: Downward to Darkness
Epilogue Take a Walk with Me Down Michigan Avenue
Notes
Select Bibliography
Chapter 2 1846-1850s: "There Was a Child Went Forth"
Chapter 3 1860s: Pathways
Chapter 4 1870s: Apprenticeship
Chapter 5 1880s: Fruition
Chapter 6 1890s: Triumph
Chapter 7 1900s: Divergence
Chapter 8 1910-1924: Downward to Darkness
Epilogue Take a Walk with Me Down Michigan Avenue
Notes
Select Bibliography
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Adler and Sullivan; architectural firm; Dankmar Adler; personal life; biography; biographical; sketch; Owen Aldis; American Institute of Architects; William Peirce Anderson; Pierce; Art Institute; Chicago; Auditorium Building; Beaux Arts; Edward Bennett; traditionalist; collaboration process; collaboration; friendships; John Wellborn Root; habits; family; parents; personality; Edwin Burnham; wife; spouse; children; Elizabeth Weeks Burnham; Margaret Sherman Burnham; Burnham and Root; Chicago architecture; Chicago buildings; D. H. Burnham and Company; John Edelmann; Ralph Waldo Emerson; Evanston; Thomas Hines; blueprint; Richard Morris Hunt; William Le Baron Jenney; Lincoln Memorial; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; MIT; Francis Davis Millet; Monadnock Building; Harriet Monroe; Charles Moore; organic; organic architecture; Plan of Chicago; plans; Railway Exchange Building; Henry Hobson Richardson; Schlesinger and Mayer; skyscraper; Albert Sullivan; mental illness; alcoholism; education; beliefs; architectural forms; architectural theories; Patrick Sullivan; Thomas Tallmadge; Robert Twombly; Wainwright Building; Washington; D.C.; Western Association of Architects; history of architecture; World’s Columbian Exposition