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Craig Ellwood (born Jon Nelson Burke; April 22, 1922 – May 30, 1992) was an American architect whose career spanned the early 1950s through the mid-1970s in Los Angeles. Although untrained as an architect, he fashioned an influential persona and career through a talent for good design, self-promotion, and ambition.
James Tyler and Audrey Townsend Richard Michael Townsend Tyler (9 November 1916 – 13 January 2009) was an English architect who was notable for his restoration work on large private houses after the Second World War, which allowed families to own more manageable homes while remaining sympathetic to their original designs.
The William H. Tyler House is a historic house in Lincoln, Nebraska. It was built in 1890 for William Henry Tyler, an immigrant from Wales who founded the W. H. Tyler Stone Company in Lincoln in 1881. [2] It was designed in the Queen Anne and Richardsonian Romanesque styles by James Tyler, William's brother. [2]
James Walter Chapman-Taylor (24 June 1878 – 25 October 1958) was a New Zealand architect. One of the country's most important domestic architects of his time, he is noted mainly for his Arts and Crafts-influenced houses. Chapman-Taylor was also a skilled craftsman, builder, furniture designer and photographer, and had a keen interest in ...
The Tyler School of Art and Architecture was founded in 1935 by Stella Elkins Tyler (of the Elkins/Widener family) and sculptor Boris Blai. [2] Arts patron Stella Elkins Tyler donated her estate in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, to Temple University in the early 1930s. Tyler offered her estate with the expressed wish that, through Boris Blai, it ...
James Thomson (1852–1927) [1] was the City Engineer, City Architect, and Housing Director of Dundee, Scotland. He originally planned an immense Beaux Arts style Civic Centre covering the centre of Dundee. At the onset of First World War, his plans were scaled down and he retired in 1924.
James Paine (architect) James Paine (sculptor) John Palmer (Bath architect) John Papworth (plasterer) James Paty the Elder; James Paty the Younger; Henry Herbert, 9th Earl of Pembroke; John Phillips (c. 1709–1775) Joseph Pickford; William Fuller Pocock; George Portwood; Joseph Potter (architect) Thomas Farnolls Pritchard
William Tyler RA (18 April 1728 – 6 September 1801) [1] was an English sculptor, landscaper, and architect, and one of the three founding members of the Royal Academy, in 1768. He was Director of the Society of Artists.