Select Keyboard:
Türkçe ▾
  1. Türkçe
  2. English
  3. العربية
  4. Dansk
  5. Deutsch
  6. Ελληνικά
  7. Español
  8. فارسی
  9. Français
  10. Italiano
  11. Kurdî
  12. Nederlands
  13. Polski
  14. Português Brasileiro
  15. Português
  16. Русский
  17. Suomi
  18. Svenska
  19. 中文注音符号
  20. 中文仓颉输入法
X
"1234567890*-Bksp
Tabqwertyuıopğü,
CapsasdfghjklşiEnter
Shift<zxcvbnmöç.Shift
AltGr

sir edwin landseer lutyens

listen to the pronunciation of sir edwin landseer lutyens
İngilizce - İngilizce
born March 29, 1869, London, Eng. died Jan. 1, 1944, London British architect. His design for a house at Munstead Wood, Godalming, Surrey (1896), created for Gertrude Jekyll, established his reputation. In the series of country houses he subsequently designed, many in collaboration with Jekyll, Lutyens adapted past styles to contemporary domestic life in delightful and original ways. For the new Indian capital at Delhi, he devised a plan based on a series of hexagons separated by broad avenues; his most important building there, the Viceroy's House (1912-30), combined aspects of Classical architecture with Indian motifs. After World War I he became architect to the Imperial War Graves Commission, for which he designed the Cenotaph in London (1919-20) and other memorials
Sir Edwin Landseer
born March 7, 1802, London, Eng. died Oct. 1, 1873, London British painter and sculptor. He studied with his father, an engraver and writer, and at the Royal Academy. He specialized in animals and developed great skill in depicting animal anatomy; he sometimes humanized his animal subjects to the point of sentimentality or moralizing (e.g., Dignity and Impudence, 1839). He achieved great professional and social success and was a favourite painter of Queen Victoria. He was elected to the Royal Academy in 1831 and knighted in 1850. As a sculptor, he is best known for his bronze lions at the base of Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square (unveiled 1867)
sir edwin landseer lutyens