Geburtsdatum | Freitag, 18. Juli 1483 |
Geburtsort | Bury_St_Edmunds |
Sternzeichen | |
Beschreibung | Stephen Gardiner (27 July 1483 – 12 November 1555) was an English Catholic bishop and politician during the English Reformation period who served as Lord Chancellor during the reign of Queen Mary I and King Philip. |
Good buildings come from good people, ad all problems are solved by good design.
Georgian architecture respected the scale of both the individual and the community.
What people want, above all, is order.
The interior of the house personifies the private world the exterior of it is part of the outside world.
French architecture always manages to combine the most magnificent underlying themes of architecture like Roman design, it looks to the community.
The English light is so very subtle, so very soft and misty, that the architecture responded with great delicacy of detail.
Stonehenge was built possibly by the Minoans. It presents one of man's first attempts to order his view of the outside world.
Land is the secure ground of home, the sea is like life, the outside, the unknown.
Of all the lessons most relevant to architecture today, Japanese flexibility is the greatest.
The logic of Palladian architecture presented an aesthetic formula which could be applied universally.
Victorian architecture in the United States was copied straight from England.
The Egyptian contribution to architecture was more concerned with remembering the dead than the living.
The garden, by design, is concerned with both the interior and the land beyond the garden.