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Arthur and Erickson
Architects Arthur Erickson and Geoffrey Massey won a competition to design the university, and construction began in the spring of 1964.
Envisioned in 1963 by Arthur Erickson and Geoffrey Massey, the area adjacent to the University was not officially rezoned for development until 30 years later.
Category: Arthur Erickson buildings
Architects such as Frank Gehry, Robert Venturi, Eric Owen Moss, James Stirling and Arthur Erickson were brought in to bring the campus more up to date.
In 1976, the new building, designed by renowned Canadian architect Arthur Erickson, opened under new director Michael Ames, who served from 1974 to 1997.
The new facilities were developed with MOA by UBC Properties Trust and designed by Arthur Erickson and Stantec Architecture.
Pools had been installed temporarily only three times in MOA ’ s history: for a movie shoot in 1993, for the APEC leaders ’ summit in 1997, and to celebrate Arthur Erickson ’ s 80th birthday in June 2004.
Category: Arthur Erickson buildings
Arthur Charles Erickson, ( June 14, 1924 – May 20, 2009 ) was a Canadian architect and urban planner.
The personal selection of Arthur Erickson as the architect for the Canadian Embassy in Washington, DC by then-Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau was controversial because Trudeau overruled the objections and choices of the embassy's design committee.
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In 1971 the church membership voted to demolish the building and replace it with a hi-rise tower complex designed by Arthur Erickson.
It was renovated at a cost of $ 20 million by architect Arthur Erickson, which completed his modern three city-block Robson Square complex.
Within the general collections it has special collections such as those pertaining to architectural games for children, universal exhibitions and their architecture, and significant architects including Ernest Cormier, Peter Eisenman, Arthur Erickson, John Hejduk, Cedric Price, Aldo Rossi, James Stirling, and the artist Gordon Matta-Clark.
It was designed by Canadian architect Arthur Erickson.
Category: Arthur Erickson buildings
The Canadian Pavilion, designed by architect Arthur Erickson, featured two National Film Board of Canada productions: The Land, a look at Canada from coast to coast, filmed for the most part from a low-flying aircraft, as well as the animated short The City, directed by Kaj Pindal.
The architect Arthur Erickson designed University Hall which has received international acclaim for its architectural originality and functional design.

Arthur and landscape
The second is that the pre-Galfridian Arthur was a figure of folklore ( particularly topographic or onomastic folklore ) and localised magical wonder-tales, the leader of a band of superhuman heroes who live in the wilds of the landscape.
Although Shakespeare based many of his characters on existing archetypes from fables and myths ( e. g., Romeo and Juliet on Arthur Brooke's Romeus and Juliet ), Shakespeare's characters stand out as original by their contrast against a complex social literary landscape.
Following the early trailblazing work of Grove Karl Gilbert around the turn of the 20th century, a group of natural scientists, geologists and hydraulic engineers including Ralph Alger Bagnold, John Hack, Luna Leopold, Thomas Maddock and Arthur Strahler began to research the form of landscape elements such as rivers and hillslopes by taking systematic, direct, quantitative measurements of aspects of them and investigating the scaling of these measurements.
Their work led to the design initiatives of noted landscape architects Charles Eliot and Arthur Shurcliff, both of whom had apprenticed with Frederick Law Olmsted and Guy Lowell.
Artists such as Arthur Streeton, Frederick McCubbin and Tom Roberts applied themselves to recreating in their art a truer sense of light and colour as seen in Australian landscape.
After the destruction of the central College Hall in 1914, the college adopted a master plan developed by Central Park landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., Arthur Shurcliff, and Ralph Adams Cram in 1921 and expanded into several new buildings.
The original master plan for Wellesley's campus landscape was developed by Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., Arthur Shurcliff, and Ralph Adams Cram in 1921.
The Group of Seven — sometimes known as the Algonquin school — were a group of Canadian landscape painters from 1920 to 1933, originally consisting of Franklin Carmichael ( 1890 – 1945 ), Lawren Harris ( 1885 – 1970 ), A. Y. Jackson ( 1882 – 1972 ), Frank Johnston ( 1888 – 1949 ), Arthur Lismer ( 1885 – 1969 ), J. E. H. MacDonald ( 1873 – 1932 ), and Frederick Varley ( 1881 – 1969 ).
In the work of artists Eugene Von Guerard, Arthur Streeton, Russell Drysdale, Sidney Nolan and Louise Hearman, the human figure has been placed within an Australian landscape.
Artists such as Arthur Streeton, Frederick McCubbin and Tom Roberts applied themselves to recreating in their art a truer sense of light and colour as seen in Australian landscape.
Re-creation and restoration started on November 27, 1926 with Arthur Shurcliff as the chief landscape architect and Perry, Shaw & Hepburn as architects.
The stars of the firm were Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait, who specialized in sporting scenes ; Louis Maurer, who executed genre scenes ; George H. Durrie, who supplied winter scenes ; and Fanny Palmer, who liked to do picturesque panoramas of the American landscape, and who was the first woman in the United States to make her living as a full-time artist.
In the early 1900s, his sons W. Averell Harriman and E. Roland Harriman hired landscape architect Arthur P. Kroll to work closely with the head gardener and landscape those many acres.
There the young man was taken up by Arthur Acton of the well-known English expatriate family, who was engaged in restoring the gardens of the Acton villa outside Florence, Villa La Pietra, where the formal terraced plan had been swept away in the early nineteenth century by the fashion for English landscape gardens in the naturalistic manner.
Banyule is the birthplace of the internationally recognised Heidelberg School of Art, which was formed when a group of iconic artists, including Tom Roberts, Arthur Streeton, Frederick McCubbin, Walter Withers, Charles Conder and others moved to a shack on Mount Eagle ( now known as Eaglemont ) and began painting the landscape in a uniquely Australian way during the late 1880s.
Sir Arthur Hobhouse's 1947 Report of the National Parks Committee took a different view, and he included the South Downs in his list of twelve areas recommended for designation as a national park, defined by John Dower as an " extensive area of beautiful and relatively wild country in which, for the nation's benefit ... the characteristic landscape beauty is strictly preserved ".
In 1920, the rock was found and the waterfront rebuilt to a design by noted landscape architect Arthur Shurcliff, with a waterfront promenade behind a low seawall, in such a way that when the rock was returned to its original site, it would be at water level.
He was the eldest son of Dr. Martin Tupper ( 1780 – 1844 ), a medical man highly esteemed in his day who came from an old Guernsey family, by his wife Ellin Devis Marris ( d. 1847 ), only child of Robert Marris ( 1749 – 1827 ), a landscape painter ( by his wife Frances, daughter of the artist Arthur Devis ).
Notable projects include providing landscape design for the Anchorage Museum expansion, as well as Seattle ’ s Olympic Sculpture Park, Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, Manhattan ’ s Arthur Ross Terrace, and the Bellingham Art and Children ’ s Museum.
His works, mostly oil landscapes, are quite well regarded, but perhaps his impact was even greater as a tutor of several members of the Heidelberg School, including Arthur Streeton, who named Buvelot's 1866 painting Summer Evening Near Templestowe the " first fine landscape painted in Victoria ".
Sir Arthur Ernest Streeton ( 8 April 1867 – 1 September 1943 ) was an Australian landscape painter.
Soon after, noted landscape architect Arthur Shurcliff, a protégé of Olmsted, added new features such as the Kelleher Rose Garden and employed the more formal landscape style popular in the 1920s and 1930s.

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