Bertram Goodhue love

Bertram Goodhue

Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at bertram goodhue.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Bertram Goodhue.

Examples

  • Her award-winning designs led to an introduction to the architect Bertram Goodhue , who commissioned her to decorate the Nebraska State Capitol and the dome of the Great Hall of the National Academy of Sciences in Washington.

    Recalling Art Deco Stylist Who Defined City Jennifer Maloney 2012

  • The home was built in 1906 by New York businessman James W. Gillespie and was designed by renowned architect Bertram Goodhue.

    Movie Mansion 2006

  • The Interior Department points out that the church was designed by "noted American architect Bertram Goodhue."

    The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com Rev. Barry Lynn 2011

  • San Diego's Plaza de Panama, comprising 2.09 acres, was designed by Clarence Stein under the direction of architect Bertram Goodhue as the ceremonial center of the 1915-16

    Fore, right! <StaffMember: Roger M. Showley> 2010

  • A cathedra by Bertram Goodhue for an unexecuted design for an Episcopalian cathedral in Los Angeles

    New Liturgical Movement 2009

  • Mead and White, who, while brilliant, had a plain-vanilla aura which strongly contrasted with the more interesting, innovating traditionalism of lesser-known architects such as Delano and Aldrich or Bertram Goodhue.

    New Liturgical Movement 2009

  • LINCOLN - Famed architect Bertram Goodhue was traveling by horseback through Persia in the

    Omaha World-Herald > Frontpage 2009

  • A lot of the time, it's the subtle smell of the cool, aged, stone walls inside one of the buildings by famed architect Bertram Goodhue.

    Marine Corps Moms 2008

  • I have discussed the work of Ralph Adams Cram and Bertram Goodhue, and Cram's exertions in promoting a return to traditional forms of worship among Anglicans and nonliturgical Protestants, but there were dozens of lesser masters, such as the Irish Catholic immigrant Charles Maginnis, a former Cram employee and sometime president of the American Institute of Architects, whose breadth of work rivals that of his master, and many more local figures whose names are even less well-known today -- John T.

    New Liturgical Movement 2009

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.