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The New York Public Library

The New York Public Library

The Architecture and Decoration of the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

by Henry Hope ReedFrancis Morrone and Anne Day
Hardback
Publication Date: 10/06/2011

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The New York Public Library, one of the nation's architectural wonders, is possibly our finest classical building. Designed by John Merven Carr?re and Thomas Hastings, and inspired by the great classical buildings in Paris and Rome, it was completed in 1911. The library boasts a magnificent exterior, but that is only the beginning. In the interior, one splendid hall follows another, an awesome gallery leads to richly decorated rooms, and stairways are vaulted in marble. From the terrace to the breathtaking Main Reading Room is a triumphal way. All the devices of the classical tradition, the main artistic current of Western civilization, are brought into play. Maidens, cherubs, and satyr masks look down from ceilings. Lions' heads, paws, rams' heads, and griffins are on every side. In this beautiful volume, featuring new color photography by Anne Day, every facet of the building is described, including its inception and construction.
ISBN:
9780393078107
9780393078107
Category:
Public buildings: civic
Format:
Hardback
Publication Date:
10-06-2011
Language:
English
Publisher:
WW Norton & Co
Country of origin:
United States
Pages:
320
Dimensions (mm):
315x239x30mm
Weight:
2.09kg
Henry Hope Reed

Henry Hope Reed (1915-2013) was an architectural historian critic known for his advocacy of classical architecture and his outspoken criticism of modernist architecture.

A lifelong New Yorker, he pioneered architectural walking tours of the city under the auspices of the Municipal Art Society and served as curator of Central Park. In 1968 he founded Classical America, an advocacy group that has evolved into the Institute for Classical Architecture and Art with fifteen chapters nationwide.

Under the auspices of the Classical America Series in Art and Architecture, he published in-depth studies of the art and architecture of major classical buildings including the U.S. Capitol, the Library of Congress, and the New York Public Library.

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