词条 | Ptolemy Dean |
释义 |
PersonalDean is the son of Jenefer Dean and Joseph Dean, a judge, and the grandson of the actor and impresario Basil Dean;[1] his uncle is the noted musicologist Winton Dean.[2] Ptolemy Dean grew up in Wye in Kent. One of his sisters is called Antigone, the other is the artist Tacita Dean. He attended Kent College, Canterbury. He studied architecture first at the Bartlett School of Architecture at University College London, then continued with a post-graduate diploma in architecture from Edinburgh University. At Edinburgh, Dean studied under the late late-modernist Professor Isi Metzstein, building conservation engineer and writer Ted Ruddock and design critic Mike Duriez. Dean is a reported to be a favourite of Queen Elizabeth II, and a regular guest of the Royal Family.[3] CareerArchitectureAfter finishing his academic studies, Dean received funding from the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) to document mud adobe structures in New Mexico and Arizona. He then worked for Peter Inskip and Peter Jenkins Architects on a variety of Grade I listed buildings, including Stowe House, Chastleton House and Waddesdon Manor. Ptolemy completed the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings scholarship. He has worked for a number of Britain's more traditionally influenced architects, including Sir William Whitfield, neo-classicist John Simpson, Sir Frederick Gibberd and Richard Griffiths. At Griffiths', he provided heritage assistance in obtaining planning consent for RHWL architects' post-modern influenced extension to St Pancras Chambers. He now runs his own small practice, Ptolemy Dean Architects, near Borough Market in London. From March 2012 he has also worked as Surveyor of the Fabric of Westminster Abbey.[4] BooksDean has written and illustrated two books on the 19th-century British architect Sir John Soane, and co-written a study of London's historic Borough Market. TelevisionDean has appeared with Marianne Suhr as the resident "ruin detective" on the BBC Two television programme Restoration. In his seven-episode series The Perfect Village, on BBC Four, Dean visited 12 English villages and discussed the qualities that would create the "perfect village." Art and illustrationAs seen in his television appearances, Dean produces watercolour cityscapes and architectural renderings or illustrations. These are done in a wobbly line pen and ink technique with evocative colour washes, and are vaguely close to the style, technique, and subject matter of the architectural artist Stephen Wiltshire and influenced by the English tradition typified by Samuel Palmer. Bibliography
References1. ^{{cite news| url=https://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/2010/feb/01/joseph-dean-obituary | location=London | work=The Guardian | first=Tacita | last=Dean | title=Joseph Dean obituary | date=2010-02-01}} 2. ^As noted by Ptolemy Dean during interview on BBC Radio 3's Essential Classics programme (broadcast 28 May 2012) 3. ^{{cite web |url=http://londonersdiary.standard.co.uk/2009/11/grand-designs-of-queens-new-court-favourite.html |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2012-02-13 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091211193927/http://londonersdiary.standard.co.uk/2009/11/grand-designs-of-queens-new-court-favourite.html |archivedate=11 December 2009 |df=dmy-all }} 4. ^{{cite news|first=Oliver|last=Wainwright|title=Holy Orders|newspaper=The Guardian G2|date=2012-12-03|url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2012/dec/02/westminster-abbey-ptolemy-dean|pages=16–17|accessdate=2012-12-03|location=London}} External links
8 : Living people|British architects|Alumni of The Bartlett|Alumni of the University of Edinburgh|Place of birth missing (living people)|People educated at Kent College|1968 births|Preservationist architects |
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