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Heavenly Mansions and Other Essays on Architecture

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Brilliantly written essays on the aesthetic principles and enduring motives of architecture. A classic of architectural history and theory, Heavenly Mansions interprets architecture as a reflection of the age in which it flowers, and traces the alternating themes of fantasy and functionalism as exemplified in various styles and in the works of a number of influential men, including Wren, Viollet-le-Duc, William Butterfield, and Le Corbusier. Succinctly summarizing 800 years of viewpoints about architecture, it ranges from Gothic architecture to the Renaissance to the influence of modern abstract art on twentieth-century architecture.

"Each essay is a voyage of discovery. What is so interesting and what makes Mr. Summerson the architectural critic of his generation . . . is [an] aversion to dogma. . . . It is supremely well worth reading."― Spectator Photographs and plans

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First published January 1, 1949

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John Summerson

51 books9 followers
Sir John Newenham Summerson CH CBE was one of the leading British architectural historians of the 20th century
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Sum...


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339 reviews5 followers
June 27, 2025
I checked out this book from the library since it came up in a search for Eileen Gray and had “mansions” in the title. I only read the chapter on Le Corbusier and found it quite interesting (especially since I’m not an art nor an architectural student.)

“Just as Picasso’s work is, as he has said, a sum of destructions, so, in a sense, is Le Corbusier’s…Just as in a painting by Picasso…the appearance of a thing is torn to pieces, broken into bits and reconstituted in a ridiculous jigsaw which has, nevertheless, a perfect logic of its own…” p. 189
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