Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Architecture_parlante> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 74 of
74
with 100 triples per page.
- Architecture_parlante abstract "Architecture parlante (“speaking architecture”) is architecture that explains its own function or identity.The phrase was originally associated with Claude Nicolas Ledoux, and was extended to other Paris-trained architects of the Revolutionary period, Étienne-Louis Boullée, and Jean-Jacques Lequeu. Emil Kaufmann traced its first use to an anonymous critical essay with Ledoux's work as the subject, written for Magasin Pittoresque in 1852, and entitled "Etudes d'architecture en France". In Ledoux's unbuilt plans for the salt-producing town of Chaux, the hoop-makers' houses are shaped like barrels, the river inspector's house straddles the river, and an enormous brothel takes the shape of an erect phallus.".
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageID "1724617".
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageLength "6700".
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageOutDegree "46".
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageRevisionID "653471644".
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Allegorical_sculpture.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Ammonite.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Ammonite_Order.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Ammonoidea.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Architecture.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Beaux-Arts_architecture.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Benjamin_Henry_Latrobe.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Benjamin_Latrobe.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Bertram_Goodhue.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Bibliothèque_nationale_de_France.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Boydell_Shakespeare_Gallery.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Brown_Derby.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Category:Architectural_theory.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Charles_William_Eliot.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Classical_order.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Claude_Nicolas_Ledoux.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_Burnham.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Emil_Kaufmann.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Fossil.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink French_Revolution.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink French_revolution.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink George_Dance_the_Elder.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Giuseppe_Franzoni.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Grand_Central_Terminal.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Hartley_Burr_Alexander.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Harvard.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Harvard_University.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink James_Adam_(architect).
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Jacques_Lequeu.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink John_Boydell.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Lee_Lawrie.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Los_Angeles_Public_Library.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink McKim,_Mead_&_White.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Graves.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Modernism.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Nebraska_State_Capitol.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Neoclassical_architecture.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Neoclassicism.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink New_York_Yacht_Club.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Nonce_word.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Orders_of_architecture.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Pall_Mall,_London.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Postmodernism.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Adam.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink TV-am.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Terry_Farrell_(architect).
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink The_Brown_Derby.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Union_Station_(Washington,_D.C.).
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Capitol.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Warren_and_Wetmore.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Washington,_D.C..
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Washington_DC.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Washington_Union_Station.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLink Étienne-Louis_Boullée.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLinkText "Architecture parlante".
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageWikiLinkText "architecture parlante".
- Architecture_parlante hasPhotoCollection Architecture_parlante.
- Architecture_parlante wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Architecture_parlante subject Category:Architectural_theory.
- Architecture_parlante hypernym Architecture.
- Architecture_parlante type Company.
- Architecture_parlante comment "Architecture parlante (“speaking architecture”) is architecture that explains its own function or identity.The phrase was originally associated with Claude Nicolas Ledoux, and was extended to other Paris-trained architects of the Revolutionary period, Étienne-Louis Boullée, and Jean-Jacques Lequeu. Emil Kaufmann traced its first use to an anonymous critical essay with Ledoux's work as the subject, written for Magasin Pittoresque in 1852, and entitled "Etudes d'architecture en France".".
- Architecture_parlante label "Architecture parlante".
- Architecture_parlante sameAs m.05r9xj.
- Architecture_parlante sameAs Говорящая_архитектура.
- Architecture_parlante sameAs Q4140934.
- Architecture_parlante sameAs Q4140934.
- Architecture_parlante wasDerivedFrom Architecture_parlante?oldid=653471644.
- Architecture_parlante isPrimaryTopicOf Architecture_parlante.