... the works of man. In this new province, there must be a new type of designer. In producing the formal setting of a palace, the landscape architect's equipment may indeed differ from that of the architect only in his knowledge of plants and what effects... An Introduction to the Study of Landscape Design - Página 4por Henry Vincent Hubbard, Theodora Kimball Hubbard - 1917 - 406 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Henry Vincent Hubbard - 1917 - 588 páginas
...Charles W. Eliot to the Editors of Landscape Architecture, October, 1910, vol. I, no. I, p. 40. B i The province of landscape architecture is to guide...been separated into several branches, the fundamental a Separate cause for this subdivision of field has always been the same : the disProfession covery... | |
| Henry Vincent Hubbard - 1917 - 600 páginas
...President-Emeritus Charles W. Eliot to the Editors of Landscape Architecture, October, 1910, vol. I, no. i, p. 40. The province of landscape architecture is to guide...profession has come to be recognized, or when an old Ah't*^* profession has been separated into several branches, the fundamental a Separate cause for this... | |
| Henry Vincent Hubbard - 1917 - 636 páginas
...knowledge of nature's processes, a familiarity with nature's materials, a sensitiveness^p the rHrtrrrftf beauty of rock and wood and water, which does not...profession has come to be recognized, or when an old Ah'te\e profession has been separated into several branches, the fundamental a Separate cause for this... | |
| Henry Louis Mencken - 1927 - 598 páginas
...architect only in his knowledge of plants and what effects can be secured with them; in reproducing or intelligently preserving a natural woodland, however,...form the professional equipment of any other artist. No extraordinary knowledge of cerebral ecology is needed to suggest that under this foliage of logical... | |
| George Jean Nathan, Henry Louis Mencken - 1927 - 782 páginas
...architect only in his knowledge of plants and what effects can be secured with them; in reproducing or intelligently preserving a natural woodland, however,...the natural beauty of rock and wood and water, which docs not form the professional equipment of any other artist. No extraordinary knowledge of cerebral... | |
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