| Richard Morris Hunt - 1866 - 78 páginas
...different opinion. "Vegetation," you say, "should hold the first place of distinction." * * * * " It ig the work of nature, invulnerable to criticism, accepted...only fitness in this idea, but there is safety. All art work is the subject of animadversion ; much of it sinks beneath observation ; it is the fortune... | |
| Frederick Law Olmsted - 1928 - 660 páginas
...Commissioners as early as 1864 had gone on record as to the subordination of btiildings to the landscape: "So far as is consistent with the convenient use of the grounds, vegetation should hold first place of distinction; it is the work of nature, invulnerable to criticism, "accepted by all,... | |
| Frederick Law Olmsted - 1928 - 660 páginas
...Commissioners as early as 1864 had gone on record as to the subordination of buildings to the Landscape: "So far as is consistent with the convenient use of the grounds, vegetation should hold first place of distinction; it is the work of nature, invulnerable to criticism ^accepted by all, as... | |
| Irving D. Fisher - 1986 - 232 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| Linda Flint McClelland - 1993 - 334 páginas
...precedent for park structures that were inconspicuous and that harmonized with nature. The policy stated, So far as is consistent with the convenient use of...nature, invulnerable to criticism, accepted by all . . . and affords a limitless field for interesting observation and instruction. . . . Such as finds... | |
| 2003 - 264 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
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