Speech at University College, Worcester, April 2003 (Reported in the Times Educational Supplement, May 2003)
“Depraved these styles are called, the one with its ever broken and twisted mouldings, the other with its rich crowded carving, and depraved we may count them, if we are of the school that thinks the purpose of architectural ornament is always to state some fact of construction. The Mexican architects and their workmen were certainly not of this school. They broke their mouldings, turned and curved them and multiplied their ornament for the pure joy it gave them to see the sparkle of the sunlight on their white walls.”
A Triumph of Spanish Colonial Style (1916)
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Clarence Stein 4
American architect 1882–1975Related quotes
The Method of Teaching and Studying the Belles Lettres, Vol. I, The Third Edition (1742), Part II, Ch. 2: 'General Reflections upon what is called good Taste', pp. 45–46
Source: Aphorisms and Reflections (1901), p. 221
“The trees were full of silver-white sunlight and the meanest of them sparkled.”
Mont Saint Michel and Chartres (1904)
The Education of Henry Adams (1907)
That death caught people rather unawares. Do not discount the possibility that in a few years time someone may be able to write at least equally convincingly of the strange and rapid revival of liberal social democratic Britain.
Speech to the Parliamentary Press Gallery (9 June 1980), quoted in The Times (10 June 1980), p. 2
1980s
“Literature always anticipates life. It doesn't copy it but moulds it to it's purpose.”