An Introduction to the Study of Landscape DesignMacmillan, 1917 - 406 páginas |
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Página 1
... things which he desires , The Province usefulness and beauty , and all material progress in civilization has of Landscape consisted in his modification of his surroundings to serve these two needs . Very early in his history he shaped ...
... things which he desires , The Province usefulness and beauty , and all material progress in civilization has of Landscape consisted in his modification of his surroundings to serve these two needs . Very early in his history he shaped ...
Página 5
... things organized and accomplished , but if he is , as he should be , an artist , he will most enjoy producing original and beautiful things - expressing himself by means of arrangements of forms and colors in outdoor objects as the ...
... things organized and accomplished , but if he is , as he should be , an artist , he will most enjoy producing original and beautiful things - expressing himself by means of arrangements of forms and colors in outdoor objects as the ...
Página 7
... thing which the artist is trying Psychological Basis of to produce is an effect of pleasure in the mind of the beholder . All his Esthetic modifications of the form , color , and texture of his work are only means Theory of to the end ...
... thing which the artist is trying Psychological Basis of to produce is an effect of pleasure in the mind of the beholder . All his Esthetic modifications of the form , color , and texture of his work are only means Theory of to the end ...
Página 8
... thing perceived . All mental processes are accompanied by emotion , whether vivid or pale , and when we say " pleasure , " we mean only any of the many different forms of emotion which are pleasurable ; that is , pleasure is a name for ...
... thing perceived . All mental processes are accompanied by emotion , whether vivid or pale , and when we say " pleasure , " we mean only any of the many different forms of emotion which are pleasurable ; that is , pleasure is a name for ...
Página 9
... thing is by its very nature the segregation in Pleasure in the mind of the sensations coming from the thing , their comparison with Perception and memories of previous experience , and their attribution as character- Imagination istics ...
... thing is by its very nature the segregation in Pleasure in the mind of the sensations coming from the thing , their comparison with Perception and memories of previous experience , and their attribution as character- Imagination istics ...
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An Introduction to the Study of Landscape Design Theodora Kimball Hubbard,Henry Vincent Hubbard Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
angle of repose appearance architectural arrangement attention axis balance beauty Birch boundary building Chapter characteristics client color considerable construction Crataegus deciduous decoration definite desirable distance dominant Drawing effect enframed esthetic expression fence flower beds flowering plants foliage formal design formal scheme garden give ground H. V. Hubbard harmony illus important inclosed inclosure instance interest kind land landscape architect landscape character landscape composition landscape design landscape park larger lawn less light lots mass material mountain natural naturalistic objects Olmsted Brothers outdoor parterre particularly paths perhaps Pine plants Plate pleasure possible produce recreation relation repetition Rhododendron road rock scale scape scene scheme seen sequence serve shape shelter shrubs side slope street structures style subordinate surface surrounding terrace texture thing tion topiary topography traffic trees turf units unity usually valley various Villa Lante wall Weigela whole
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Página 1 - ... the comfort, convenience, and health of urban populations, which have scanty access to rural scenery, and urgently need to have their hurrying, workaday lives refreshed and calmed by the beautiful and reposeful sights and sounds which nature, aided by the landscape art, can abundantly provide.
Página 186 - Often the designer may judiciously somewhat accent all the effects of his shore treatment because the observer is kept at a distance by the foreground water-surface, but if there is boating on the water the conditions may well be reversed, and the planting may then be arranged to be inspected close at hand. In its relation to architectural structures,* planting bears its part in landscape composition in these ways : it enframes, limiting the composition of which the structure is the dominant object...
Página 2 - 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 can be secured with them; in reproducing or intelligently preserving a natural woodland, however, the landscape architect must have a knowledge of nature's processes, a familiarity with nature's materials, a sensitiveness to the natural beauty of rock and wood and water, which does not form the professional equipment of any...
Página 18 - I have looked studiously but vainly among them for a single face completely unsympathetic with the prevailing expression of good nature and light-heartedness. Is it doubtful that it does men good to come together in this way in pure air and under the light of heaven...
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Página 47 - I do not profess to follow either Le Notre or Brown, but, selecting beauties from the style of each, to adopt so much of the grandeur of the former as may accord with a palace and so much of the grace of the latter as may call forth the charms of natural landscape. Each has its proper situation ; and good taste will make fashion subservient to good sense.
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Página 81 - There is a chaser of wild garden close at hand, and the principal view is valed and shrubbed and clumped in the established camouflage mode. A professor and the school librarian have published a bulky textbook on more than one page of which the eighteenth century returns to life, as for instance: "A landscape of rocky upland country about a mountain tarn might be mysterious in a day of low-drifting clouds, stern or desolate in a storm, and perhaps on a bright breezy Spring morning even gay.