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David Tremlett - Ceiling 100
fullscreen
Antonio Corradini - Two mirrors
fullscreen
Anne Poirier; Patrick Poirier - Weeping eye
fullscreen
Augustus Pugin - Seats
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Giocondo Albertolli - turning them
fullscreen
Eugenio Ferretti - Imago
fullscreen
Viviano Codazzi; Domenico Gargiulo - Combat of gladiators
fullscreen
Tom Phillips - Berlin Wall with German Grass and Skies II
fullscreen
Root room
fullscreen
Frans Floris; William Key - Self-portrait of Frans Floris and William Key with Tito, Caio and Vitellius
David Tremlett - Ceiling 100
Antonio Corradini - Two mirrors
Anne Poirier; Patrick Poirier - Weeping eye
Augustus Pugin - Seats
Giocondo Albertolli - turning them
Eugenio Ferretti - Imago
Viviano Codazzi; Domenico Gargiulo - Combat of gladiators
Tom Phillips - Berlin Wall with German Grass and Skies II
Root room
Frans Floris; William Key - Self-portrait of Frans Floris and William Key with Tito, Caio and Vitellius

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Description

In November 1850, Augustus Pugin (1812-1852) was fully engaged in the designs for the new English Parliament in Westminster. For at least six years, there have been rumors about who is the true soul of the project, between the two architects, whether the famous Charles Barry (1795-1860) or his young assistant, Pugin, who already in 1845 had felt the need to publicly declare his subordination to Mr. Barry. Pugin's drawing for these chairs, which is kept at the Victoria & Albert Museum (E.1501-1912), is accompanied by numerous indications for the cabinet-maker John Gregory Crace, who in all probability carried out the project scrupulously. The chairs are designed for the House of Commons, as Pugin explains in the text: “Mr. Barry wants a Pattern Chair for the Commons lobbies. His idea is a light but strong chamfered chair like the above sketch covered with green leather ". The death of Pugin at the age of forty will ensure that the chairs of the House of Commons are among his last works. His all-encompassing approach to design, inspired by Gothic designs and principles, will be a central starting point for nineteenth-century English design and modernity.

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