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Music has a bewildering number of genres and subgenres, and if anything, architecture has even more. Why? Because on top of all the historical and stylistic variations that music and architecture have, with buildings there is the additional factor: availability of local building materials.
Two buildings of local stone in Dundee, Scotland:- https://www.dundee.com/sites/default...?itok=PFX-bizD The McManus Gallery, a Scottish Gothic Revival art gallery and public library, opened in 1895. https://www.youssoufobe.com/blog_ima...5652045887.jpg The Morgan Academy, a Scottish Baronial Revival boarding school, opened in 1866. |
Those are awesome Lisnaholic.
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Thanks Mindfulness!
Your photo of the inside of a dome was impressive, with its geometry and perspective. I even worked out where it was from: https://i.pinimg.com/originals/c8/b6...e4d29b1ecb.jpg Not so different in style, here are some perfectly detailed Corinthian columns for you: tightly packed in two rows, supporting the front of the Supreme Court building: https://thumbs.dreamstime.com/b/supr...o-41702124.jpg |
A Tale of Two Cities:
Maybe it's my mood, but these two places both seem to have a sad beauty about them. Why not spend 5 mins in each place? In Detroit, it's the photos and circumstances of abandonment. In Shaftesbury, it's the music, first of Dvorak, then of Vaughan Williams, and a nostalgia for an England that once was. |
^^ Thanks for that second video Lisna, that was lovely. Is that really the most famous view in England? If yes, why?
Didn't watch much of the first video, too sad. The U.S. really resembles the third world a lot of the time. The wealth disparity is incomprehensible. |
Thanks for the response, adidasss.
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Thanks for the info. :)
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It's obvious when you think about it.
The other day I mentioned how architecture has a limitless number of styles, and very often a label is slapped on that relates to a time period. In Britain, Tudor, Georgian, Victorian are commonly used adjectives, which of course refer to the monarchs of the time. In Russia, in a basement in Ekaterinburg, they drew a brutal line under their their monarchal dynasty, so how do they label post-revolution architectural styles? Logically enough, by the dictator of the day - and if you watch this video you can learn the differences between a Stalinka , a Khrushchyvoka and a Breshnev commieblock. 11 mins, thick accent, but I found it a very interesting insight into Russian public housing, plus great photos of sad-looking buildings:- |
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