Finally 1882 Wood Engraving Division Triangle William Robert Ware Architect Horizon Xdc3 Bonkers Deal: 45% Off [2AlOdPWn]
This is an original 1882 black and white wood engraving illustrating division by triangles.CONDITIONThis 129+ year old Item is rated Very Fine +. Light foxing and aging. No creases. No natural defects.No surface rub.1/2 inch tear - left margin. No wa
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Finally 1882 Wood Engraving Division Triangle William Robert Ware Architect Horizon Xdc3 Bonkers Deal: 45% Off [2AlOdPWn]
CONDITION
This 129+ year old Item is rated Very Fine +. Light foxing and aging. No creases. No natural defects.No surface rub.1/2 inch tear - left margin. No water damage. Please note that there are pen markings tracing a portion of the figures in the bottom-center.
- Product Type: Original Wood Engraving; Black / White
- Grade: Very Fine +
- Dimensions: Approximately 14 x 10 inches; 36 x 25 cm
- Authentication: Serial-Numbered Certificate of Authenticity w/ Full Provenance
- Protection: Packaged in a custom archival sleeve with an acid-free black board (great for display, gift-giving, and preservation)
Period Paper is excited to offer items from this collection designed by William Robert Ware of architectural principles and practices relating to planar, linear and cylindrical perspectives, as well as topics illustrating vanishing points, angles and other architectural measuring systems and means.
William Robert Ware
William Robert Ware (1832-1915) was an American architect hailing from Cambridge, Massachusetts. Ware received his formal education at the Milton Academy, Harvard College, as well as at HarvardÕs Lawrence Scientific School. Later, he studied under the founder of the first American architectural school, Richard Morris Hunt. Ware aided in the design and development of the Swedenborgian High Street Church in Brookline, Massachusetts, HarvardÕs Weld Hall, the Episcopal Divinity School campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the Walter Hunnewell House in Wellesley, the Ether Monument for the Boston Public Garden and more. He also became the first architectural professor at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). Later, Ware founded the School of Architecture at Columbia University.
Keywords specific to this image: architecture, parallel, projection, perpendicular, plane, perspective projection, pictorial, axonometric, isometric, plans, traces, vanishing point
XDC3C82
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