GOTHIC REVIVAL

term designating a return to the building styles of the Middle Ages. Although the Gothic revival was practiced throughout Europe, it attained its greatest importance in the United States and England. The early works were designed in a fanciful late rococo manner, exemplified by Horace Walpole's remodeled "gothick" house, Strawberry Hill (1770). By 1830, however, architects turned to more archaeological methods. Thus, just as the classical revivalists had done, they began to copy the original examples more literally. A. W. N. Pugin wrote two of the basic texts of the Gothic revival. In Contrasts (1836) he put forth the idea that the Middle Ages, in its way of life and art, was superior to his own time and ought to be imitated. He amplified his ideas in The True Principles of Pointed or Christian Architecture (1841), propounding that not only must Gothic detail be authentic but that the contemporary architect should achieve the structural clarity and high level of craftsmanship that were found in the Middle Ages by using the methods of medieval builders. John Ruskin elaborated on these ideas in The Stones of Venice. Followers of Ruskin and Pugin soon came into conflict with proponents of the classic revival, and the resulting conflict has often been called a battle of the two styles. The Church of England supported the Gothic movement, however, and provided for the restoration of a great number of medieval religious buildings. Sir George Gilbert Scott was the noted English restorer of the day, while in France, Viollet-le-Duc led the exponents of the Gothic revival there. Many architects found it advantageous to work in both styles, as did Sir Charles Barry, a leading classicist. Working with A. W. N. Pugin, he won a competition in 1840 with Gothic designs for the houses of parliament. In the United States the picturesque aspect of the style took precedence over the doctrinaire approach of Pugin. The first works of note in the Gothic style appeared in the 1830s in buildings designed by A. J. Davis and Richard Upjohn. The younger James Renwick became important in the 1840s and was especially renowned for his Grace Church and St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City, both prime examples of the Gothic revival in the United States. The Gothic movement foundered because of the impossibility of reproducing medieval buildings when there was no longer a medieval economy or technology. Only superficial effects of the style lingered in some eclectic works of the 19th and 20th cent. However, the ideals of earlier theoreticians, the clear expression of structure and materials have influenced modern architecture.

See K. Clark, Gothic Revival (3d ed. 1963); P. B. Stanton, The Gothic Revival and American Church Architecture (1968); C. L. Eastlake, History of the Gothic Revival (rev. ed. 1972).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Gothic Revival  - 8757 results

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...THE ECCLESIOLOGISTS AND THE GOTHIC REVIVAL BY JAMES F. WHITE Assistant...first significant monument of the gothic revival is usually considered to be...movement gave powerful impetus to the gothic revival. In an article on "The French...
...Bibliography: p.Includes index. 1. Gothic revival Literature --History and criticism...71 Gothic Revival Architecture as Related to Gothic...apparently responsible for such Gothic revivals. But whether the Gothic novel...
...313 30500 5 alk. paper 1. Gothic revival Literature History and criticism. 2. Gothic revival Literature Bio-bibliography...establishment of a canon for the first Gothic revival of 1764 1820. Various other scholars...
...influential work A History of the Gothic Revival 1872 stated what has since...recent histories of the so-called Gothic Revival have shown, this architectural...introducing historicism into the gothic revival. 13 Yet despite this apparently...
...century History and criticism. 4. Gothic revival Literature Great Britain. 5...status arose from the history of Gothic as an ideological force in nationalistic discourse, from the romance revival which celebrated medieval culture...
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journal articles on: Gothic Revival  - 266 results

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...4418 Rokoko-Gotik -- Ein Phanomenon des englischen "Gothic Revival" im 18. Jahrhundert (Rococo-Gothic--an aspect of the 18th-century Gothic revival in Britain), by Marion Tuting. Georg Olms Verlag...
Beyond the Gothic Sublime: Poes Pym or the Journey of Equivocal...with the combination of the most powerful Gothic modes: horror and terror or the sublime...and undermining the conventions of the Gothic sublime. Like other Gothic texts, Pym...
ANN RADCLIFFES GOTHIC NARRATIVE AND THE READERS AT HOME...the public imagination of England, the Gothic novels of Ann Radcliffe terrified English...conquest of the hearth. Her novels are Gothic-really the apogee of the forms early ascendancy-but...
Race and the Gothic Monster: The Xenophobic Impulse of Louisa...In her study entitled Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monsters...Halberstam concludes her rereading of the Gothic monster by implicating more than just...
...Established critical opinion on the Gothic romance has long identified landscape...Summers and Devendra Varma, consider the Gothic a highly patterned narrative form, and...impoverished the significance of place in Gothic writing, allowing all subsequent commentators...
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magazine articles on: Gothic Revival  - 161 results

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The Gothic Revival revisited. by George M. Wedd...moral values. The uniqueness of the Gothic Revival is indeed that, virtually alone among...light and smart was exactly what the Gothic revival was not. What is one to make of an...
...Gothic architecture saw it, knowingly or not, through the eyes of the Pugin family". Where the first proponents of the Gothic revival had indulged in liberal confections of pointed arches and other approximated features, Pugin approached even the finest...
Religious revival by Carla Bertolucci For...studded with simple Romanesque and early Gothic churches dating from the twelfth century...River Douro and the city beyond, the early Gothic church and its attendant chapels originally...
...citys downtown to a dark embrace in the small hours at neo-Gothic La Catedral. As tango historian Irene Amuchastegui put it...individuals ran the tango scene, but the local and international revival of the dance halls has taken it away from the specialists...
...proving difficult to pin down." And this is because all sorts of things are gothic--there are gothic churches, and gothic-revival churches. There are municipal buildings designed in a neo-gothic style. There are also 19th-century gothic novels...
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newspaper articles on: Gothic Revival  - 251 results

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A GOTHIC REVIVAL; PROPERTY UPDATE an Old Convent in Herefordshire...daring reinterpretation of the original Gothic style, a three-bedroom, three-storey new...features, soaring heavenward in determined gothic style, yet the period-style mews houses...
Luellas Gothic Revival; Entranced: Lily Allen and Jaime Winstone, Kelly Osbourne and Alexa...hair, kohl-rimmed eyes and spooky black lipstick,Bartley showed a dark, gothic vision for autumn 2008, made feminine by reams ofribbon and lashings...
...especially, stained glass for the Gothic Revival movement that was so strong during...interested in securing a pair of Gothic Revival painted brass chandeliers and...seminal 19th century books on the Gothic Revival style. In addition to providing...
...sterling30) PUGIN is one of the most famous English Gothic revival architects. Many of us have only a dim sense of his...remarkable man. Pugin did not invent what is known as the Gothic Revivalit had many inventors. But without Augustus Welby Northmore...
...Victorian, Scott was the high priest of the Gothic Revival. He did not so much revive the Gothic style as impose it upon the nation, and there...However, George Gilbert Scott was not a one-man revival. When he swept down the aisle it was at the...
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encyclopedia articles on: Gothic Revival  - 43 results

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GOTHIC REVIVAL term designating a return to the...styles of the Middle Ages. Although the Gothic revival was practiced throughout Europe, it...wrote two of the basic texts of the Gothic revival. In Contrasts (1836) he put forth...
...preceding period. However, the Gothic tradition never completely died...in the 19th cent. it enjoyed a revival in Europe and in the New World...by the romantic movement (see Gothic revival ). Gothic Sculpture Sculpture...
...material for the architects of the Gothic revival . Among them is Specimens of...for his prominent role in the Gothic revival. Although he erected numerous...be termed the textbooks of the Gothic revival. His other publications include...
...English architect. One of the foremost champions of the Gothic revival, he did much church work, including St. Mary Magdalene...in London, was the last great attempt to apply the Gothic revival to a public building. ____________________ Copyright...
...WILLIAM 1814 1900, English Gothic-revival architect. Favored by the Ecclesiological...Puginlike correctness in recalling Gothic forms, Butterfield rose to prominence...59) introduced the High Victorian Gothic manner. The softer hues of the interior...
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