词条 | Wilson Eyre | ||||||||||||
释义 |
|name = Wilson Eyre, Jr. |image = WilsonEyre.jpg |nationality = American |birth_date = October 30, 1858 |birth_place = Florence, Italy |death_date = {{d-da|October 23, 1944|October 30, 1858}} |death_place = Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |practice = |significant_buildings = Charles Lang Freer House University of Pennsylvania Museum (with Frank Miles Day and Cope & Stewardson) Swann Memorial Fountain (Eyre & McIlvaine, architects; Alexander Stirling Calder, sculptor) |significant_projects = |awards = }} Wilson Eyre, Jr. (October 30, 1858 – October 23, 1944) was an American architect, teacher and writer who practiced in the Philadelphia area. He is known for his deliberately informal and welcoming country houses, and for being an innovator in the Shingle Style. Architect and authorThe son of Americans living abroad, he was born in Florence, Italy, and educated in Europe, Newport, Rhode Island, and Canada. He studied architecture briefly at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, joined the Philadelphia offices of James Peacock Sims in 1877, and took over the firm on Sims’s death in 1882. In 1911, he entered into partnership with John Gilbert McIlvaine, and opened a second office in New York City. The firm of Eyre & McIlvaine continued until 1939.[1] For his most important early houses, "Anglecot" (1883) and "Farwood" (1884–85), he used a simple plan: a line of asymmetrical public rooms stretching along a single axis, extending even outside to a piazza. Like many Shingle Style architects, he employed the open "living hall" as an organizing element: all of the main first floor rooms connecting to the hall, often through large openings. In addition, he used staircases to extend the space of the hall to the second floor. According to architectural-historian Vincent Scully: "This sense of extended horizontal plane and intensified "positive" scale evident in Eyre's work becomes later a basic component in the work of [Frank Lloyd] Wright..."[2] Eyre collaborated with artists such as Alexander Stirling Calder and Louis Comfort Tiffany. Following his early success, Eyre became a leader in the international country life movement, lecturing in England, and corresponding with British and German architects. He was one of the first U.S. architects to be featured in the Arts & Crafts magazine International Studio, and he was published by Hermann Muthesius, the chronicler of the so-called "English" house of the turn of the century. Prior to Frank Lloyd Wright's rise to prominence, Eyre was arguably the best-known domestic architect in the U.S. among foreign designers. His post-1890 country houses, such as "Allgates" (1910, expanded by Eyre & McIlvaine 1917) are among the most accomplished American essays in the restrained stucco cottage idiom popularized by C.F.A. Voysey and Ernest Newton in England. He was one of the founders and editors of House & Garden magazine.[1] He designed many distinctive gardens with his residences, and wrote extensively of the need for interaction between rooms and outdoor spaces. He was also renowned for his distinctive artistic drawings, often in watercolor. His extant drawings are now housed in the Architectural Archives of the University of Pennsylvania. He was elected a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1893. In August 1914 Eyre was stranded in Europe along with thousands of Americans attempting to escape the fighting that erupted in World War I. Eyre returned to the United States in late September and shared a cabin with Augustus P. Gardner, a member of the House of Representatives from Massachusetts.[3] In 1917, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Philadelphia Chapter of the American Institute of Architects. He taught at the University of Pennsylvania, and was one of the founders of the T Square Club of Philadelphia in 1883.[1] In 1910, he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician. Selected worksPhiladelphia areaResidences
Other buildings
Other regionsResidences
Other buildings
Image galleryReferences1. ^1 2 Wilson Eyre Biography at Philadelphia Architects and Buildings 2. ^Vincent J. Scully, Jr. The Shingle Style and the Stick Style (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1955, revised 1971), p. 124, figs. 97, 98, 100 & 101. 3. ^Constance Gardner, ed., Some Letters of August Peabody Gardner (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1920), 91. 4. ^Anglecot at Bryn Mawr College 5. ^"Anglecot" plan & photos at University of Pennsylvania 6. ^"Farwood" plan & photos at University of Pennsylvania 7. ^Original drawings current owner 8. ^Newhall house at Chestnut Hill Historical Society 9. ^Taylor House at Historic American Buildings Survey 10. ^Jonathan Lai, "At Rutgers-Camden, new Writers House in works," The Philadelphia Inquirer, January 12, 2015. 11. ^[Schaeffer House] at Historic American Buildings Survey 12. ^Clarence Moore house (left) at Bryn Mawr College 13. ^Cochran house at University of Pennsylvania 14. ^Neil and Mauran houses at University of Pennsylvania 15. ^Joseph Leidy house (right) at Bryn Mawr College 16. ^Randolph house at Chestnut Hill Historical Society 17. ^{{NRISref|version=2010a}} 18. ^"Bel Orme" at the Historic American Buildings Survey 19. ^{{cite web|url=http://maskandwigrentals.wordpress.com/about/ |title=Mask & Wig |publisher=Maskandwigrentals.wordpress.com |date= |accessdate=2013-03-12}} 20. ^Corn Exchange Bank at Bryn Mawr College 21. ^McPherson Square Library at Library Company of Philadelphia 22. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://hlrb.newrochelleny.com/DocumentView.aspx?DID=9 |title=Rochelle Park/ Rochelle Heights Historic District |date= |accessdate=2013-03-12}} 23. ^"Meadowcroft" at Philadelphia Architects and Buildings 24. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.housemouse.net/ebooks/plan0504.htm |title=Sands mansion plan & photos |publisher=Housemouse.net |date= |accessdate=2013-03-12}} 25. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.crjc.org/heritage/N08-52.htm |title=Parrish House |publisher=Crjc.org |date=1938-05-15 |accessdate=2013-03-12}} External links
9 : 20th-century American architects|1858 births|1944 deaths|19th-century American architects|University of Pennsylvania faculty|Fellows of the American Institute of Architects|Architects from Philadelphia|Preservationist architects|Members of the Philadelphia Club |
||||||||||||
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。