Description

Book Synopsis

Herbert James Rowse (1887–1963) was an extraordinary architect who shaped the city of Liverpool with his array of exquisite buildings, plans, and infrastructure. Practicing in an eclectic manner that was influenced by American Beaux Arts and later using simpler geometries of monumental bare brick, his large body of work reveals a modernity that was concerned with luxurious materials, restrained but contemporary decoration and sculpture, and bold forms often with a sense of theatre and performance. His work has endured passing trends and fashions, retaining a seductive appeal and resonance with visitors and occupants alike, despite its often monumental massing and extraordinary scale.

This book aims to discern not only the architectural merits and advances of his work, but also their wider significance. Through Rowse’s work we gain a glimpse into some of the broader agendas of the time and place, not least through the corporate and banking commissions that accompanied the large docks and shipping firms in Liverpool, where Rowse produced some of his most distinctive work. In addition to these commercial ventures Rowse contributed to the post-war housing debates through his proposals that looked to rows of cottages set around village greens, rather than high-rise living.

Published in association with The Twentieth Century Society.




Trade Review
'This enlightening volume in the Twentieth Century Architects series assesses the work of an architect who sought not to create a new architecture from scratch, but one that was inspired by historical precedent.'

Context, the Journal of the IHBC
‘The architectural contribution to Liverpool made by Herbert Rowse (1887-1963) can hardly be underestimated […] and this excellent and well-illustrated monograph gives him his proper and richly deserved due.’
Peter Parker, A Magazine

Table of Contents
  1. Monumental

  2. Tunnel structures

  3. Brick

  4. Social housing and planning


Herbert Rowse

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    A Paperback / softback by Iain Jackson, Simon Pepper, Peter Richmond

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      Publisher: Historic England
      Publication Date: 01/06/2019
      ISBN13: 9781848025493, 978-1848025493
      ISBN10: 1848025491

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Herbert James Rowse (1887–1963) was an extraordinary architect who shaped the city of Liverpool with his array of exquisite buildings, plans, and infrastructure. Practicing in an eclectic manner that was influenced by American Beaux Arts and later using simpler geometries of monumental bare brick, his large body of work reveals a modernity that was concerned with luxurious materials, restrained but contemporary decoration and sculpture, and bold forms often with a sense of theatre and performance. His work has endured passing trends and fashions, retaining a seductive appeal and resonance with visitors and occupants alike, despite its often monumental massing and extraordinary scale.

      This book aims to discern not only the architectural merits and advances of his work, but also their wider significance. Through Rowse’s work we gain a glimpse into some of the broader agendas of the time and place, not least through the corporate and banking commissions that accompanied the large docks and shipping firms in Liverpool, where Rowse produced some of his most distinctive work. In addition to these commercial ventures Rowse contributed to the post-war housing debates through his proposals that looked to rows of cottages set around village greens, rather than high-rise living.

      Published in association with The Twentieth Century Society.




      Trade Review
      'This enlightening volume in the Twentieth Century Architects series assesses the work of an architect who sought not to create a new architecture from scratch, but one that was inspired by historical precedent.'

      Context, the Journal of the IHBC
      ‘The architectural contribution to Liverpool made by Herbert Rowse (1887-1963) can hardly be underestimated […] and this excellent and well-illustrated monograph gives him his proper and richly deserved due.’
      Peter Parker, A Magazine

      Table of Contents
      1. Monumental

      2. Tunnel structures

      3. Brick

      4. Social housing and planning


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