Gothic Revival (Encyclopaedia Britannica) architectural style that drew its inspiration from medieval architecture and competed with the Neoclassical revivals in the United States and Great Britain.
Gothic Revival Movement started during the mid-18th century during which gothic styles were revived. Also a literary movement, see Horace Walpole's gothic novel (the first ever gothic novel) "The Castle of Otranto", 1764.
Gothic Revival Primarily an architectural movement which began in the 1740s in England.
Gothic Revival Style A style popular until the 1930s, it was inspired by a renewed interest in the church architecture of medieval France, England, and Germany ...
Gothic revival architecture (often linked with the Romantic cultural movement), a style originating in the 18th century which grew in popularity throughout the 19th century, contrasted Neoclassicism.
The Arts and Crafts Movement became popular in the 1870's and was first introduced to America through the Gothic Revival as well as through particular works of the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood.
a large number of examples of sculpture in ivory, from that date onwards the chain is unbroken, and during the five or six hundred years of unrest and strife from the decline of the Roman empire in the 5th century to the dawn of the Gothic revival of ...
Although superseded by Renaissance art, there was a Gothic Revival in the 18th and 19th centuries, largely rooted in nostalgia and romanticism.
a constant antithesis to Romanticism or Gothic revivals? although from the late 19th century on it had often been considered anti-modern, or even reactionary, in influential critical circles.
At the peak of his career, Memling may already have assumed a certain nostalgia, close to a Gothic revival approximating, in the happiest sense, ...
including: Romanesque (c.775-1050), Gothic (c.1150-1280), International Gothic (c.1300-1500), Renaissance (c.1400-1530), Mannerism (c.1530-1600), Baroque (c.1600-1700), Rococo (c.1700-50), Neoclassicism (c.1750-1815), Greek and Gothic Revival (c.
crocket An upwardly projecting repeated decorative element, often along spires and gables in Gothic Revival architecture. cupola A feature at the top of a roof, usually dome-shaped and opened by windows or columns.
Initially it was inspired by the Pre-Raphaelites' gothic revival, notably Burne-Jones and Rossetti who produced designs for Morris' company.
The Gothic revival, however, had brought into existence a great body of knowledge concerning the arts of the Middle Ages, and Morris, together with the Pre-Raphaelite painters and a small group of architects and designers, ...
See also: Gothic, Roman, Painting, Movement, Classic
 
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