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The Seven Lamps of Architecture |
List Price: $11.95
Your Price: $8.96 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: Lamps for everyone Review: I first got this book to help study the principles of architecture and found that I could use the concepts in my everyday life. I am currently a student of architecture at WSU and found that the observations Ruskin was making about architecture 150 years ago still applied today. The seven "lamps" mentioned in his book not only apply to architecture, but can also be utilized in almost any field of study or occupational setting. The writing is wonderfully done and ideas are clearly presented to the reader. This is the type of book you get done reading and have a genuine desire to be better at everything you do.
Rating: Summary: Lamps for everyone Review: I first got this book to help study the principles of architecture and found that I could use the concepts in my everyday life. I am currently a student of architecture at WSU and found that the observations Ruskin was making about architecture 150 years ago still applied today. The seven "lamps" mentioned in his book not only apply to architecture, but can also be utilized in almost any field of study or occupational setting. The writing is wonderfully done and ideas are clearly presented to the reader. This is the type of book you get done reading and have a genuine desire to be better at everything you do.
Rating: Summary: outdated Review: I found that tying in human traits to different styles of architecture was not interesting at all. There is no discussion of building techniques or the practical side of architecture. This would be more for the artist that is trying to project different human feelings into the structure. If you are looking for a techincal guide to architecture this is not it.
Rating: Summary: outdated Review: I found that tying in human traits to different styles of architecture was not interesting at all. There is no discussion of building techniques or the practical side of architecture. This would be more for the artist that is trying to project different human feelings into the structure. If you are looking for a techincal guide to architecture this is not it.
Rating: Summary: rip off Review: If you are looking for a "practical guide to the structures and tools" of architecture, this is NOT your book nor your guide. For John Ruskin is an art critic, classicist, and moralizing aesthetic prophet. He is not an "art for art's sake" temporizer or relativist. He not only knows what HE believes...but he believes he knows what YOU should believe too. If that makes you uncomfortable or makes you feel hampered, you might want to pass him by until you feel you can accommodate the "insult" and "restrictions" on your "free will choices." Otherwise, there is much of beauty, wonder, and insight to be gained in these pages. Ruskin's point of view is that of a classical Platonist mixed with the moralizing tenor of an exhorting (but not shrilly so) prophet toward beauty, Truth, and clarity of vision...and moral purpose in Art. He also has a wondrous prose style which is both clear, compelling, and entrancing. This edition published by Dover as a reprint is of the second edition of the work from 1880. It also includes 14 plates of drawings which Ruskin did to illustrate the points which he makes in the text. Along the way, Ruskin includes shortened Aphorisms in the margin which restate the bold face print points which he is making in the text. In Chapter 2, titled "The Lamp of Truth," Ruskin stands forth most forcefully and dynamically (and perhaps to the "modern," most tendentiously) as the classical Platonic moralizer and aesthetic apostle/prophet/priest. Though raised a strict Protestant, Ruskin rebelled and left Christianity for a classical Paganism based on beauty, Truth, and clarity. Needless to say, this more than tended to alienate him and isolate him from the mercenary, industrialized Victorian world which was chugging along outside his hermetically sealed temple dedicated to Truth, Beauty, Goodness, and Clarity. Mercantilism and "practical progress" don't exactly exalt those four princples as the means or the goals whereby to make money and become successful in the eyes of the world or popular opinion. But if you want to read about Truth and Beauty and read it through the eyes and soul of a lover of those qualities -- and read it expressed in most beautiful prose and style (which is both poetic and powerful), then Ruskin and this work are clearly the choices you should make. This excerpt from Ruskin tied to Aphorism 29 {"The earth is an entail, not a possession.") clearly shows that Ruskin's vision and prophetic power extend beyond the merely practical realm of architecture into an all-encompassing total vision of responsibility and reverence: "The idea of self-denial for the sake of posterity, of practising present economy for the sake of debtors yet unborn, of planting forests that our descendants may live under their shade, or of raising cities for future nations to inhabit, never, I suppose, efficiently takes place among publicly recognized motives of exertion. Yet these are not the less our duties; nor is our part fitly sustained upon the earth, unless the range of our intended and deliberate usefulness include, not only the companions, but the successors, of our pilgrimage. God has lent us the earth for our life; it is a great entail. It belongs as much to those who are to come after us, and whose names are already written in the book of creation, as to us, and we have no right, by any thing that we do or neglect, to involve them in unnecessary penalties., or deprive them of benefits which it was in our power to bequeath." Read...enjoy...benefit...
Rating: Summary: Be forewarned: Unashamed moralizing and aesthetic certainty Review: If you are looking for a "practical guide to the structures and tools" of architecture, this is NOT your book nor your guide. For John Ruskin is an art critic, classicist, and moralizing aesthetic prophet. He is not an "art for art's sake" temporizer or relativist. He not only knows what HE believes...but he believes he knows what YOU should believe too. If that makes you uncomfortable or makes you feel hampered, you might want to pass him by until you feel you can accommodate the "insult" and "restrictions" on your "free will choices." Otherwise, there is much of beauty, wonder, and insight to be gained in these pages. Ruskin's point of view is that of a classical Platonist mixed with the moralizing tenor of an exhorting (but not shrilly so) prophet toward beauty, Truth, and clarity of vision...and moral purpose in Art. He also has a wondrous prose style which is both clear, compelling, and entrancing. This edition published by Dover as a reprint is of the second edition of the work from 1880. It also includes 14 plates of drawings which Ruskin did to illustrate the points which he makes in the text. Along the way, Ruskin includes shortened Aphorisms in the margin which restate the bold face print points which he is making in the text. In Chapter 2, titled "The Lamp of Truth," Ruskin stands forth most forcefully and dynamically (and perhaps to the "modern," most tendentiously) as the classical Platonic moralizer and aesthetic apostle/prophet/priest. Though raised a strict Protestant, Ruskin rebelled and left Christianity for a classical Paganism based on beauty, Truth, and clarity. Needless to say, this more than tended to alienate him and isolate him from the mercenary, industrialized Victorian world which was chugging along outside his hermetically sealed temple dedicated to Truth, Beauty, Goodness, and Clarity. Mercantilism and "practical progress" don't exactly exalt those four princples as the means or the goals whereby to make money and become successful in the eyes of the world or popular opinion. But if you want to read about Truth and Beauty and read it through the eyes and soul of a lover of those qualities -- and read it expressed in most beautiful prose and style (which is both poetic and powerful), then Ruskin and this work are clearly the choices you should make. This excerpt from Ruskin tied to Aphorism 29 {"The earth is an entail, not a possession.") clearly shows that Ruskin's vision and prophetic power extend beyond the merely practical realm of architecture into an all-encompassing total vision of responsibility and reverence: "The idea of self-denial for the sake of posterity, of practising present economy for the sake of debtors yet unborn, of planting forests that our descendants may live under their shade, or of raising cities for future nations to inhabit, never, I suppose, efficiently takes place among publicly recognized motives of exertion. Yet these are not the less our duties; nor is our part fitly sustained upon the earth, unless the range of our intended and deliberate usefulness include, not only the companions, but the successors, of our pilgrimage. God has lent us the earth for our life; it is a great entail. It belongs as much to those who are to come after us, and whose names are already written in the book of creation, as to us, and we have no right, by any thing that we do or neglect, to involve them in unnecessary penalties., or deprive them of benefits which it was in our power to bequeath." Read...enjoy...benefit...
Rating: Summary: Wonderful architectural moralism Review: Ruskin is a master in morality and architecture. This combination, which is very nineteenth-century-like, mixes Ruskin with a wonderful mastery of the English language. The Seven Lamps is a must-read for all you folks who have not yet studied architecture in all its facets.
Rating: Summary: rip off Review: The kessinger edition of this book is a rip off!!! do not buy it!!! i received a copy in which the margins on the pages were 2 inches all around and the text was so small. everything seemed to be copied with a fax machine, so there was lots of tiny black dots all over the pages. the images are so unclear. they were black and white with no grayscales and it was so hard to make out what the images were. i returned this book for a refund. buy the dover edition instead. its practically the same text except the text fills up the whole page and the pictures are clear. its also less than half the price of the kessinger edition.
Rating: Summary: Architecture's Most Influential Written Work Review: This book is the origin of virtually every theory held throughout the history of architecture. The arts and crafts movement, Frank Lloyd Wright's organicism, and Corbusier's New Architecture are just a few examples of prominent theories whose foundations lie within the pages of this book. In this book, Ruskin prescribes the essential elements required to make timeless, meaningful architecture. This manifesto is a must for any student interested in the practice and study of architecture.
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