词条 | Hunt, Richard Morris |
释义 | Hunt, Richard Morris American architect born Oct. 31, 1827, Brattleboro, Vt., U.S. died July 31, 1895, Newport, R.I. architect who established in the United States the manner and traditions of the French Beaux-Arts (Second Empire (Second Empire style)) style. He was instrumental in establishing standards for professional architecture and building in the United States; he took a prominent part in the founding of the American Institute of Architects and from 1888 to 1891 was its third president. His eclectic work was almost equally successful in the ornate style of the early Renaissance in France, the picturesque villa style, and the monumental Classical style of the Lenox Library. Hunt studied in Europe (1843–54), mainly at the École des Beaux-Arts (Beaux-Arts, École des) (“School of Fine Arts”) in Paris, where he was the first American to be trained. In 1854 he was appointed inspector of works on the buildings connecting the Tuileries (Tuileries Palace) with the Louvre (Louvre Museum). Under Hector Lefuel he designed the Pavillon de la Bibliothèque (“Library Pavilion”), opposite the Palais-Royal. ![]() Among the most noteworthy of his domestic buildings were the residences of W.K. Vanderbilt (1879–82; destroyed), J.J. Astor (1891–95; destroyed), and Henry G. Marquand (1881–84; destroyed) in New York City; George W. Vanderbilt's country house at Biltmore, N.C., near Asheville (1888–95; the largest American house ever built); and several of the large, opulent summer houses in Newport, R.I., including Marble House (1888–92) and The Breakers (1892–95). |
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