American Country Houses of the Gilded Age: (Sheldon's "Artistic Country-Seats") (Dover Architecture)
A**2
The opulent "country homes" of yesterday!
The author of this book refers to country homes of the Gilded Age as "Country Seats" (or "country cottages"). By the author's definition, these were homes of, "grandiose size and scale with imposing facades complemented by manicured gardens and with large and impressive reception rooms, halls, parlors, dining rooms, and other public spaces."George Sheldon published a book around 1887 documenting this surge in architectural creativity (expressed via country seats) and called his book :"ARTISTIC COUNTRY SEATS".Therefore, this book in review, called, AMERICAN COUNTRY HOUSES OF THE GILDEN AGE, (by Arnold Lewis) was written to show the homes photographed in the Sheldon book, and to update the information provided by Sheldon, so that we can better understand what the Architects and structures' owners were trying to express.For a long time, I have been interested in seeing what the opulent homes of the Gilded Age must have looked like, especialy those that were avaialable before they were all torn down or destroyed by vandals, fire, etc.Since I was not too familiar with "country seats" I wanted to find a good book on this specific topic. Well, by buying this book by Arnold Lewis I think I was able to get a better feel for these "country seats" of the wealthy (aka: "country cottages" of the rich).The "country cottages" owned by the wealthy class shown in this Lewis book, are mostly from 1880 to around 1889. Also included in this book are a few selected Casinos from the same period. Reason for the Casinos being included in the Lewis book is probably because the same famous Architects that designed some of the opulent private cottages also designed Casinos located in vacations spots visited by the wealthy class. In addition, some of the Casinos bear a striking resemblance to the styles of the country seats shown in this Lewis book.Anyhow, when reading this book, I would advise that the reader reads the INTRODUCTION throughly because it explains the role that Sheldon had, in describing each structure. In other words, before jumping right in (as many of us often do) and looking at all the photos, I would recommend reading the entire INTRODUCTION, because it puts the photos in complete perspective.For instance: The author of this book has researched the Sheldon photos (and reviews) and then re-vamped the descriptions so that they are more understandable to a reader from our Era.The photos are large and the reader can see all the details so clearly. In fact, it's amazing that photos taken in the 1880's can be so clear!The black and white photos, have an almost sepia tone to them, making them even more enjoyable to admire. Each structure's photo has a clear explanation of the Architect of the structure, and also a brief description of the date of production and a background of the actual owners, and also, when the structure was finalized.The photos include a reproduction (in black and white) of the "blueprint" of the first floor of each structure.As other commentators have pointed out, the book does not show "blueprints" of the second or third floors, however, the author does attempt to describe the upper floors within the photos' description.Each Architectural style is described in detail in the INTRODUCTION. However, if you are a novice as to specific Architectural styles of the past, then I would recommend becoming briefly acquainted with Architectural styles (and the elementary Architectural vocabulary) before attempting to fully understand the structures` actual styles. For example, to a novice, a structure that looks like a "snow white castle" may be misunderstood, unless the reader has a brief knowledge & understanding of why the early Victorian and/or Queen Anne homes were designed with so many gables and filligrees and turrets.I should also mention that this book's INTRODUCTION mentions the COST of each home, specifically at the time of the home's finish. So, I think that the readers will find this fact also very interesting, especially when comparing each home to each other (eg: why did some homes cost $6,000, while others cost $200,000.00?).Also included in the INTRODUCTION are descriptions of where each home was once located (by State), and also which Architectural firm designed each home.
L**E
Photo quality is very good; text quality is poor
This book is definitely worth buying if you're interested in seeing photos of old mansions. Each one also includes a very small floor plan drawing, but only for the main floor - never for the basements or upper floors.The quality of the images is very good, as is the smooth satin paper. However the quality of the type is poor -- it's pixelated rather than being composed of sharp edges.
K**E
Great photos on quality paper with narratives and partial floor plans
A**R
Richly Illustrated
This book is richly illustrated with black & white photos of historic houses in the United States. For the person interested in houses from the gilded age, this book provides clear photographs with a minimum of text that can be studied in detail. The photos, more often than not, set the house in its surroundings, however photos of gardens and landscape architecture is minimal. This book is ideal for someone looking for ideas to incorporate into their own plans for home-building, as well as for students and professionals seeking a good photographic reference to the gilded age that covers houses in many regions of the country.
W**Y
... Houses of the Gilded Age - is just a wonderful book. I recommend it to every one - ...
American Country Houses of the Gilded Age - is just a wonderful book. I recommend it to every one - beautiful detail photos of each home, the history of who built each home and their owner - the building cost is noted - and the real treat of this book is that first floor plans are shown - I regreat that the upper floor/s is not shown also. Each and all will enjoy the history of these homes - I look forward to other books from Arnold Lewis.
I**E
not your everyday collection of great houses of the Gilded Age
Comprehensive collection of photography and text. Interesting: not your everyday collection of great houses of the Gilded Age. Nice product.
A**L
Amazingly great photography - for any era.
I enjoyed the text for each home. I'd have appreciated even more detail though suspect such information may not be available.
G**S
The photographs and paper quality is perfect but the floor plans only show the ground floor ...
The photographs and paper quality is perfect but the floor plans only show the ground floor and the square footage is omitted but still an interesting book about the homes of the gilded age.
A**R
A brilliant book showing the houses of the rich Americans in ...
A brilliant book showing the houses of the rich Americans in that gilded age, which I am interested in. Good condition & well packaged.
P**R
Fascinating!
This very substantial book presents 100 imposing American “country houses” of the 1880’s, many by the ocean or in the mountains but some actually in then newly created suburbs.Generally, a single page is devoted to each and presents:• One fine quality vintage photo photograph (in black and white, of course);• The floor plan for the main level;• A short recent essay by Arnold Lewis, touching the owner’s and the architect’s careers and analysing the building, definitely not with a complacent eye.The result is sheer delight for anyone interested in domestic architectural history.
C**N
Muy completo
Fantástica la combinación de planos y fotos y los textos traen la información necesaria. Mucha información en cada casa publicada
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