Tag Archives: William Morris
183: Reading Ruskin Recently
Or: “The Most Important Man of the Last Two Hundred Years” Good Folks, As anyone reading the posts on this site over the course of the last 15 months knows well, 2019 marked the bicentennial of Ruskin’s birth. It was … Continue reading
Posted in Ruskin's Life, Tributes
Tagged "A John Ruskin Collection", "A Ruskin Alphabet", "Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings", "The Paradise of Cities", Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Andrew Hill, BBC Culture, Bloke's Progress, Carlo Scarpa, Charles Darwin, Clive Wilmer, Darren Bloke, Derrick Leon, Effie Gray, Emma Sdegno, Emma Stibborn, Frank Lloyd Wright, Giotto, Giotto and his Works in Padua, Henry Cole, Hunt Emerson, industrial revolution, J. Howard Whitehouse, J. m. w. Turner, James S. Dearden, John Blewitt, John Ruskin, Kevin Jackson, Lund Humphries, Marriage of Inconvenience, Master of the Guild of St. George, Modern Painters, Octavia Hill, Of Kings' Treasuries, ofof, Oliver Stone, Oscar Wilde, Oxford University Press, Padua, Pallas Athene, Rachel Dickinson, Richard Johns, Richard Jones, Robert Brownell, Robert Hewison, Robert Lansdown, Ruskin, Ruskin and the Power of Seeing, Ruskin Turner and the Storm Cloud, Ruskinian, Ruskinland, Scuola di San Rocco, Sidney Sussex College, Sir Quentin Blake, Suzanne Fagence Cooper, The Arena Chapel, The Art Newsletter, The Bid Draw, The Financial Times, The Gothic Revival, The Guild of St. George, The King of the Golden River, The Lake District, The Lamp of Memory, The Library Edition of the Works of John Ruskin, The Nature of Gothic, The Seven Lamps of Architecture, The St. George's Company, The Whilehouse Collectionn, The Whitehouse Collection, There is no wealth but life, Traffic, Unto this Last, Unto this Last and Other Writings by John Ruskin, Valerie Purton, w. g. collingwood, William Morris, Wyre Forest, York Art Gallery
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