Building Reputations: Architecture and the Artisan, 1750–1830

Awards:   Short-listed for Shortlisted for the Historians of British Art prize for 2020 in the category 'Single-authored book with a subject 1600-1800' 2020 (UK) Short-listed for Shortlisted for the Historians of British Art prize for 2020 in the category 'Single-authored book with a subject 1600–1800' 2020 (UK) Winner of Winner of the Alice Davis Hitchcock medallion for 2019 2019 (UK) Winner of Winner! Alice Davis Hitchcock medallion for 2019 2019 (UK)
Author:   Conor Lucey
Publisher:   Manchester University Press
ISBN:  

9781526119940


Pages:   264
Publication Date:   10 May 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Building Reputations: Architecture and the Artisan, 1750–1830


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Awards

  • Short-listed for Shortlisted for the Historians of British Art prize for 2020 in the category 'Single-authored book with a subject 1600-1800' 2020 (UK)
  • Short-listed for Shortlisted for the Historians of British Art prize for 2020 in the category 'Single-authored book with a subject 1600–1800' 2020 (UK)
  • Winner of Winner of the Alice Davis Hitchcock medallion for 2019 2019 (UK)
  • Winner of Winner! Alice Davis Hitchcock medallion for 2019 2019 (UK)

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Conor Lucey
Publisher:   Manchester University Press
Imprint:   Manchester University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 17.00cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 24.00cm
Weight:   0.812kg
ISBN:  

9781526119940


ISBN 10:   1526119943
Pages:   264
Publication Date:   10 May 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Introduction: a new apology for the builder 1 Building reputations: a genteel life in trade 2 Designing houses: the façade and the architecture of street and square 3 Decorating houses: style, taste and the business of decoration 4 Building sales: advertising and the property market Conclusion: the builder rehabilitated? Select Bibliography Index -- .

Reviews

'This is a fine book about the significant role of artisan house builders as architectural designers in the later Georgian period. When they did not exit their trades to become what earlier historians have ranked as 'architects', these artisan builders have remained shadowy figures. Ranging widely and with an even-handed command of material from both sides of the British Atlantic, especially giving Dublin due weight, Conor Lucey illuminates these people and their contributions to architectural design with insight, detail, clarity and humour.' Peter Guillery, Bartlett School of Architecture, London -- .


'This is a fine book about the significant role of artisan house builders as architectural designers in the later Georgian period. When they did not exit their trades to become what earlier historians have ranked as 'architects', these artisan builders have remained shadowy figures. Ranging widely and with an even-handed command of material from both sides of the British Atlantic, especially giving Dublin due weight, Conor Lucey illuminates these people and their contributions to architectural design with insight, detail, clarity and humour.' Peter Guillery, Bartlett School of Architecture, London 'Lucey's fascinating book explores the role of the artisan in the still somewhat mysterious design processes behind the creation of the urban terraced house. Based on extensive new research it will enable us to place artisan-builders alongside other well-known designer-makers - such as print, furniture or ceramic specialists - in the period. Histories to date have focussed on the tradesman's role in the construction of town houses but Lucey makes a compelling argument for their contribution to the design and decoration of both exteriors and interiors. In doing so he extends existing scholarship in exciting new directions enabling us more fully to understand the workings of the building trade across the second half of the long eighteenth century. The book's scope is transatlantic and crucially Ireland for the first time, alongside England and America, is brought into discussions on the inter-connections across the eighteenth-century Atlantic building world.' Elizabeth McKellar, The Open University -- .


'This is a fine book about the significant role of artisan house builders as architectural designers in the later Georgian period. When they did not exit their trades to become what earlier historians have ranked as 'architects', these artisan builders have remained shadowy figures. Ranging widely and with an even-handed command of material from both sides of the British Atlantic, especially giving Dublin due weight, Conor Lucey illuminates these people and their contributions to architectural design with insight, detail, clarity and humour.' Peter Guillery, Bartlett School of Architecture, London 'Lucey's fascinating book explores the role of the artisan in the still somewhat mysterious design processes behind the creation of the urban terraced house. Based on extensive new research it will enable us to place artisan-builders alongside other well-known designer-makers - such as print, furniture or ceramic specialists - in the period. Histories to date have focussed on the tradesman's role in the construction of town houses but Lucey makes a compelling argument for their contribution to the design and decoration of both exteriors and interiors. In doing so he extends existing scholarship in exciting new directions enabling us more fully to understand the workings of the building trade across the second half of the long eighteenth century. The book's scope is transatlantic and crucially Ireland for the first time, alongside England and America, is brought into discussions on the inter-connections across the eighteenth-century Atlantic building world.' Elizabeth McKellar, The Open University 'This is the first study of eighteenth-century century building activity which addresses the city house in Britain, Ireland and the American colonies with focus on London, Dublin and Philadelphia. This grand vista of urban domestic builders in the Atlantic world is mirrored in the range of scholarship that is brought to bear on the topic, a rich field of study brilliantly marshalled to provide the reader with a lucid, insightful and hugely stimulating panorama of new directions in architectural history. Lucey argues that the late eighteenth-century townhouse interior owed more to the plasterer and builder as agents of taste than it did to the sensibilities of its occupants and in so doing points up the builder's facility for design and decoration. This book is an argument, a new apology for the builder, a broadside which asks us not to dumb down creative skill in the operative parts of architectural production. It is a book which will undoubtedly build reputation.' Professor Christine Casey, Trinity College Dublin -- .


Author Information

Conor Lucey is Assistant Professor in the School of Art History & Cultural Policy at University College Dublin.

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