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Architecture 1600-2000: Art and Architecture of Ireland
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Architecture 1600-2000: Art and Architecture of Ireland Hardcover - 2014

by Rolf Loeber; Hugh Campbell; Livia Hurley


Details

  • Title Architecture 1600-2000: Art and Architecture of Ireland
  • Author Rolf Loeber; Hugh Campbell; Livia Hurley
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Pages 600
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art
  • Date 2014-11
  • Illustrated Yes
  • ISBN 9780300179224 / 0300179227
  • Weight 6.8 lbs (3.08 kg)
  • Dimensions 11.6 x 9.9 x 1.6 in (29.46 x 25.15 x 4.06 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Art, Irish, Architecture - Ireland
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2013044526
  • Dewey Decimal Code 709.415

About the author

Rolf Loeber holds professorships at the University of Pittsburgh, where he oversees research on the causes of crime as well as mental health problems in young people. He has published extensively on Irish architecture, the history of fiction, and social, economic and plantation history. Hugh Campbell is professor of architecture at University College, Dublin, where he is currently head of the School of Architecture. He has published extensively on subjects from Irish architecture and urbanism to photography and urban space. Livia Hurley is an architect and architectural historian working in private practice in Dublin. Her research interests include urban history and the study of industrial sites and monuments. John Montague is assistant professor in the College of Architecture, Art and Design at the American University of Sharjah, UAE. His research interests include medieval and early modern architecture, and urban mapping. He is co-author, with Colm Lennon, of John Rocque's Dublin: a Guide to the Georgian City (Dublin, 2010). Ellen Rowley is an architectural historian, researching 20th-century architecture in Ireland and beyond. She has written extensively on architectural modernism and edited a collection of Irish architectural writing: Patterns of Thought (2012). She is a research fellow at Trinity College Dublin.