Notable Acquisitions
1993-1994 | 1994-1995
| 1995-1998 | 1998-2000
| 2000-2002 |
2002-2003
1993-1994
1. Architectural Publication Society. The dictionary of architecture.
London: T. Richards [1853-92].
8 v. in 4
Art Locked Stacks, Large NA31.A67 f
This is one of the two or three largest and most authoritative
architectural encyclopedias of the 19th century. The principal credit
for its publication belongs to the British architect Wyatt Papworth
(1822-1894), who was the leading figure in the Architectural Publication
Society from its foundation in May 1848 until the completion of
the Dictionary in April 1892. The Dictionary is now particularly
useful to architectural historians engaged in assessing 19th-century
British attitudes toward various building types and toward architecture
in general, and for information on the construction technology of
the period.
2. De Rossi, Domenico. Studio d'architettura civile
.... Roma: Stamp. di D. De Rossi, 1702-1721.
3 v.
Art Locked Stacks, Large NA1120.R6 f
A collection of engravings of 16th and 17th-century
altars and church interiors in Rome designed by such important architects
as Bernini, Pietro da Cortona, and Carlo Fontana, this book is not
only useful as a near-contemporary record of the architecture, but
also as an example of early 18th-century art book publishing. Several
generations of the de Rossis participated in the family publishing
firm, which was one of the first to develop a mass market for art
materials.
3. Katsushika, Hokusai. Hokusai Manga: the sketchbooks
of Hokusai. New York: Weatherhill, 1994.
15 v.
Art Locked Stacks, Small NE1325.K2A4 1993
From 1814 to 1878 the sketchbooks of the Japanese
artist Hokusai (1760-1849) were published in the form of wood engravings.
3,190 drawings were represented on 1300 cherry wood blocks. (The
Stanford University Libraries' Department of Special Collections
has a few of these prints from the original edition.) This reprint
edition, made with the original blocks and on special handmade paper,
is an excellent facsimile of the 19th-century set.
4. Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola. Regles des cinq ordres
d'architectvre, de M. Iacques Barozzio de Vignole. Traduction nouuelle,
& augmentation de ses oeuures. Paris: P. Mariette, 1665.
Art Locked Stacks, Small NA2810.V514 1665
Vignola (1507-1573), a painter and architect in the
service of the Farnese family, presented in the original Italian
edition (1562) of the book he called Regola delli cinque ordini
his method for calculating the correct proportions of the Orders
of classical architecture, e.g. Ionic, Doric. The book and its illustrations,
enormously useful to practicing architects, and especially influential
in France, was translated into several French pocket editions, like
this one, that could easily be carried around from site to site
by working architects.
5. Vitruvius Pollio. An abridgment of the architecture
of Vitruvius. Containing a system of the whole works of that author.
Illustrated with divers copper plates, curiously engraved; with
a table of explanation, to which is added in this edition the etymology
and derivation of the terms used in architecture. First done in
French by Monsr. Perrault ... and now Englished, with additions.
London: Printed for A. Swall and T. Child, 1692.
Art Locked Stacks, Small NA2515.V852 1692
Vitruvius (fl. 1st century BC) was a Roman architectural
theoretician whose book, De architectura, has been a source of information
and a strong influence on many later architects working in styles
that borrow classical elements. It was known in manuscript form
during the Middle Ages but did not become a major force until after
it was first printed in the late 15th century. In 1674 the text
was translated into French by Claude Perrault and rearranged to
read more easily and logically. The Perrault version was very widespread;
its English translation is the text of the present edition. As a
simplified version of Vitruvius, it was very popular in England,
particularly among architects without much formal training, and
its influence was widespread in the early 18th century.
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Last modified:
November 14, 2007
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