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God's Architect: Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain
 
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God's Architect: Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain [Hardcover]

Rosemary Hill
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Hardcover, Mar 3 2009 CDN $32.73  
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Review

“A magnificent biography, as sumptuous and intricate as anything Pugin built . . . a properly glorious monument.”—John Carey, Sunday Times
(John Carey )

“As a lucid work of architectural history and as the readable biography of a most protean and brilliant man, it is worthy of the best of his buildings.”—Colm Tóibín, Irish Times
(Colm T�ib�n )

“A very remarkable book about a very remarkable man . . . This book will interest not only those who delight in architecture, but also anyone who is interested in the Victorian Age.”—A. N. Wilson, Daily Mail
(A. N. Wilson )

“An excellent and detailed biography . . . Pugin changed the face of England forever. This book can be recommended for its disciplined but convincing championship of the most important English architect of the nineteenth century.”—Peter Ackroyd, The Times
(Peter Ackroyd )

“Rosemary Hill has written a superb study of this true romantic and tragic original. It is scholarly, but intimate, warm and readable too, immediately becoming the standard work.”—Stephen Bayley, Observer
(Stephen Bayley )

“This is surely the best biography of a British architect yet written: an enthralling book.”—Simon Bradley, Evening Standard
(Simon Bradley )

“One of the great biographies of our day.”—Michael J. Lewis, A. A. Files
(Michael J. Lewis )

“Rosemary Hill is a wonderful writer. She has not only given us Pugin''s story--the life of a hugely important British artist--she has placed his work in a rich and intelligently explained cultural context.”—K. Anthony Appiah
(K. Anthony Appiah )

"Rosemary Hill''s book is the first modern biography of Pugin, and it is a considerable feat both in its painstaking original research and the way in which Hill, deals with architectural history, relating Pugin personally to his buildings, justifying brilliantly her biographical approach."—Fiona MacCarthy, The New York Review of Books

(Fiona MacCarthy New York Review of Books )

Product Description

Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812–1852) was one of Britain’s greatest architects, and his short career one of the most dramatic in architectural history. Born in 1812, the son of a French draftsman, at 15 Pugin was working for King George IV at Windsor Castle. By the time he was 21 he had been shipwrecked, bankrupted, and widowed. Nineteen years later he died, insane and disillusioned, having changed the face and the mind of British architecture in works as revered as the House of Lords and the clock tower at Westminster, known as Big Ben.  

 

God’s Architect is the first modern biography of this extraordinary figure. Rosemary Hill draws upon thousands of unpublished letters and drawings to re-create Pugin’s life and work as architect, propagandist, and Gothic designer, as well as the turbulent story of his three marriages, the bitterness of his last years, and his sudden death at 40. It is the work of an exceptional historian and biographer.

 

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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent., Mar 21 2010
By 
M. Flight (toronto) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: God's Architect (Paperback)
Rosemary Hill is by far a better biographer than architectural historian, and there are a few examples whereby she would argue a Pugin cathedral to favour decorated, when it is more early english, for example. However, this book is an excellent introduction to the life of AWN Pugin and I highly recommend it!! It is written beautifully, and captures pugin in almost an endearing quality.

Highly recommended.
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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Pointless Biography of Pugin, April 26 2010
By Roberto - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: God's Architect: Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain (Hardcover)
God's Architect: Rosemary Hill's Pointless Biography of Augustus Pugin, V.P.

God's Architect (Yale UP, 2009) is a monumental work of scholarship, but because it lacks a unifying thesis or central point, Rosemary Hill's sprawling 600-page, fifteen-years-in-the-making biography of the nineteenth century English architect Augustus Pugin (1812-1852) is, in the final analysis, unfortunately, a failure. The closest thing to a central thesis that she offers, the closest thing to an explanation of Pugin's extraordinary life and career, is her speculation that he contracted syphilis, possibly before he was out of his teens, and that it was that disease that underlay many of his physical and mental problems and that led finally to his insanity and death, at the age of forty.

Hill had the sense not to marry her biography to syphilis; at best, or at worst, God's Architecture only flirts with it. She does not mention syphilis until page 151, and not again until page 257, but she returns to the subject near the end, on page 492 and again on page 598, in the Epilogue, when she has no other explanation for Pugin's extraordinary life and work to fall back on.

If there is no point to Hill's biography, there was, quite literally, to Pugin's life and career. He was a practitioner and champion of what he preferred to call Pointed architecture. One of his most important books was The True Principles of Pointed or Christian Architecture (1841). He said he converted to Catholicism as a result of his study of Pointed architecture. Hill's failure to take into account and adequately explain Pugin's lifelong commitment to and obsession with Pointed architecture is the Achilles' heel of God's Architect.

In making light of the titles and honors he never was awarded, in spite of his important contributions in architecture and the applied arts, Pugin once quipped that the only letters he was ever likely to have after his name were V.P., which he made clear stood for "very pointed." But Hill did not explain his "very pointed" quip, either in her biography or when she was asked directly about it in an interview with The Guardian.

Hill is good at showing Pugin's contributions to architecture and the applied arts, and conversely in showing how egotistical and obtuse he could be, but not why he was so crazy about Pointed architecture. Pugin believed Pointed architecture had been the means to his salvation by pointing , literally and figuratively, toward heaven and Catholicism. Syphilis may or may not have killed Pugin, but Pointed architecture is what he lived for.
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