A life on the waves.Pugin is one of the great British architectural heroes so I shouldn't have been so surprised to discover the Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin 1812-1852 site at www.pugin.com. It's a treasure trove TREASURE TROVE. Found treasure. 2. This name is given to such money or coin, gold, silver, plate, or bullion, which having been hidden or concealed in the earth or other private place, so long that its owner is unknown, has been discovered by accident. and, boy, is it fast. There is just one page, which is not an especially bad thing. Nor is the fact that it is composed almost entirely of links. These are links to his buildings in various counties, to his personal and professional history and the background of the times. You click on, say, Alton Castle Alton Castle is in the village of Alton, Staffordshire (grid reference SK074425). It was founded by Bertram de Verdon and built on a rocky precipice overlooking the River Churnet in the 12th century. and up pops a page with five small but readable images. Back to 'Pugin the Man' and there are three of them. I mention images because there is no hanging about with little horizontal meters or coy little clocks. Click and uh! there you are: three to five pristine images on the screen. The site is the work of Victoria Farrow farrow see farrowing. for the Pugin Society. Mike Farrow was the builder. I'm not inquiring which was responsible for the visual design because it would have had old Pugin spinning in his grave as would the quality of the text. But you really want to forgive the amateurishness am·a·teur·ish adj. Characteristic of an amateur; not professional. am a·teur because of the speed and what seems to be the completeness of the coverage. Maybe if the big thumbnails were expandable, maybe if the rules round every bit of image and text were replaced by some other graphic device--or none, maybe if the home page dispensed with the cover of John Harries biography of Pugin ... But you especially want the pointless animated cantering can·ter n. A smooth gait, especially of a horse, that is slower than a gallop but faster than a trot. v. can·tered, can·ter·ing, can·ters v.intr. 1. To ride a horse at a canter. horse and gig to be replaced by an animation of Pugin steering his wrecker, The Caroline, out to the Goodwin Sands Goodwin Sands, stretch of shoals and sandbars, c.10 mi (20 km) long, lying off the east coast of Kent, SE England. It forms a breakwater E of The Downs, a roadstead. Shipwrecks were formerly frequent on the Sands. to collect salvage. A small group of us has always supported the idea that Pugin made his serious money from looting ships lost off Ramsgate where he had built his Grange. Now, from this site, we are pretty sure we were right. Sutherland Lyall rummages through his bulging sack of cyber goodies to bring readers some festive cheer. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

a·teur
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion