994 resultados para Stained glass windows -- Colorado -- Denver.


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"The purpose of t his thesis is to present a history of stained glass used in the De.nver area in tbe past hundred years. It has been necessary to present a sufficient background on t he history of the art since its heritage in the twelfth century so that t he evolution can be properly understood. Differ.ent movements, first in Europe and later in America and Europe, have influenced the art and brought it to its present state in t he Denver area"

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Films found on the windows of residential buildings have been studied. The main aim of the paper was to assess the roles of the films in the accumulation of potentially toxic chemicals in residential buildings. Thus the elemental and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon compositions of the surface films from the glass windows of eighteen residential buildings were examined. The presence of sample amounts of inorganic elements (4.0–1.2 × 106 μg m−2) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the films (BDL - 620.1 ng m−2) has implications for human exposure and the fate of pollutants in the urban environment. To facilitate the interpretation of the results, data matrices consisting of the chemical composition of the films and the building characteristics were subjected to multivariate data analysis methods, and these revealed that the accumulation of the chemicals was strongly dependent on building characteristics such as the type of glass used for the window, the distance from a major road, age of the building, distance from an industrial activity, number of smokers in the building and frequency of cooking in the buildings. Thus, building characteristics which minimize the accumulation of pollutants on the surface films need to be encouraged.

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Display of work accomplished by Section 4 and 9 of the 2005 Foundation students. Index to student work filed with the poster.

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Historical stained glass in Calumet and Laurium revealed the complex structures of these industrial communities. Creating an Industrial Archaeology-focused approach, I examined stained glass as material culture. Sacred glass revealed ethnic and religious values of a congregation through the style, iconography, and quality of the glasswork. Residential glass showed how owners represented themselves within cultural settings by meeting social expectations. Commercial glass indicated community status of owners through discreet and artistic shows of wealth and taste. Corporate glass displayed prosperity and belonging through the superior quality and cost of the glasswork. Viewing stained glass as material culture opened new methods of looking at both stained glass and industrial communities. Findings from my research can teach the public about the importance of preserving and conserving stained glass, and that can lead to greater public appreciation for the material culture found within these industrial communities.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Whisper Our Futures was an invited design proposal to produce a major public artwork for the State of Queensland’s 150th Anniversary Celebrations. It involved a network of 100 individual scrolling digital text boxes each with individual audio systems arranged together in a tessellated format. This form (specified by the originating brief) both mimicked the soaring gothic arches typical of Queensland cathedrals and was also suggestive of their stained glass windows. Each text module presented a message in both visual and audible forms for Queenslanders living 150 years hence - spoken both by the general public aw well as prominent figures. In this way the work was designed as a focus of future hope, historical reflection and inspiration to visitors to Queensland cathedrals throughout the entire year of celebrations (2009). The work was planned to premiere at Brisbane’s main Anglican Cathedral and then tour to nine other state cathedrals throughout 2009.---- Two staged proposals and budgets were invited throughout 2007. After the second successful proposal stage the State Premier and cabinet changed, ultimately leading the public art components to be dropped from the program. The proposal currently remains on file at the Queensland Premiers Office.

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La catedral de León, debido al estado de ruina que presentaba a mediados del siglo XIX, se vio sometida a partir de entonces a una serie de intervenciones de conservación, restauración y reconstrucción que la transforma-ron significativamente. A pesar de encontrarnos con gran cantidad de documentación escrita sobre este monumento y de existir varios estudios sobre los arquitectos restauradores que intervinieron en este a finales del siglo XIX, resulta sorprendente que todavía existan períodos de este lapso de tiempo en el que su análisis y profundización haya sido menor. Este es el caso del período de Juan Bautista Lázaro como arquitecto director de las obras de la catedral leonesa, existiendo únicamente sobre toda su obra un estudio general que fue realizado por el director de este trabajo de investigación, por lo que nos llevó a considerar que era oportuno profundizar sobre la figura y obra de uno de los arquitectos más importante de la restauración en España de este período, no solo por su obra en sí, sino también por sus pos-turas significativas respecto a la intervención en el patrimonio arquitectónico: su respeto por los añadidos históricos, su preferencia por no aislar los monumentos, sus interés por los sistemas constructivos y su deseo de recuperar los oficios tradicionales que estaban completamente perdidos en la España decimonónica. El objetivo principal de la tesis es, por tanto, el análisis descriptivo y arquitectónico de los proyectos e intervenciones que Lázaro desarrolló y ejecutó para la catedral de Santa María de Regla de León, para deducir los principios e ideas que guiaron su quehacer en este templo, y poder, tras estudiar sus diversas publicaciones escritas y los proyectos e intervenciones de restauración acometidas en otros edificios de carácter monumental, llegar a establecer sus criterios de intervención en el patrimonio histórico y artístico. De acuerdo con esto, la tesis se estructura en tres partes: una primera parte en la que se contempla el pensamiento arquitectónico de Lázaro en su intervención en el patrimonio histórico; una segunda, en la que se abordan directamente los proyectos e intervenciones de Lázaro en la pulchra leonina, previa aproximación del citado arquitecto al proceso de restauración que se acometía en dicho templo; y una tercera, en la que se realiza el estudio de las principales intervenciones de restauración que ejecutó en otros edificios del patrimonio arquitectónico español. El presente trabajo de investigación se ha servido de la documentación escrita, gráfica, planimétrica y fotográfica que sobre los temas tratados existe desperdigada en diversos archivos dependientes de distintos organismos oficiales civiles y eclesiásticos. Además, el hecho de haber podido acceder a los trabajos de conservación y restauración que en estos momentos se están llevando a cabo en las zonas en las que intervino Lázaro (vidrieras, rejas, puertas, fábricas, cubiertas, etc.), y el poder intercambiar opiniones y criterios con la persona que actualmente es responsable de las obras de la catedral de León, ha facilitado y complementado el desarrollo de la presente tesis al haber podido contrastar y tomar datos directamente en el monumento objeto de estudio. También se ha llevado a cabo la consulta de las distintas revistas de arquitectura publicadas en aquellos años y de los múltiples libros que versaban sobre los edificios objeto de este trabajo o que guardaban relación con ellos. Asimismo hemos logrado conocer el testimonio de algunos de los herederos de Lázaro y de varios de los descendientes de los operarios que trabajaron bajo sus órdenes. Como conclusiones generales, la tesis define por primera vez los criterios generales que guiaron su quehacer profesional en el patrimonio. Además, en este trabajo se analizan pormenorizadamente los proyectos y actuaciones de Lázaro en la catedral de León, abordándose también en profundidad el trabajo del mencionado arquitecto en el ámbito de la restauración arquitectónica. Para lograr este objetivo, esta tesis no se ha limitado únicamente a analizar la información existente en los proyectos y en los in-formes de supervisión de los mismos, como tradicionalmente se había hecho, sino que también se ha tratado de verificar si los datos contenidos en los diferentes documentos de un mismo proyecto y en los borradores de los mismos tenían relación y coherencia entre sí. Además, se ha procurado realizar el análisis comparativo de la realidad construida con el contenido de los proyectos, liquidaciones y documentos de la fase de ejecución de las obras. Este análisis comparativo no había sido realizado hasta la fecha, siendo este, por tanto, una de las aportaciones del trabajo. Por último, la tesis abre tres vías de investigación futuras (que ya se han tratado y avanzado en parte, pero que escapan a los límites de este trabajo). Estas se refieren al estudio de la evolución de la representación gráfica de los planos de la catedral leonesa catalogados en este trabajo, de la actividad pública de Lázaro y su preocupación por la defensa del patrimonio como diputado en las Cortes, arquitecto municipal de Ávila y arquitecto diocesano de Ávila y Toledo, y de cómo sus actuaciones de restauración en el patrimonio arquitectónico influyeron en los proyectos de obra nueva que construyó. ABSTRACT Due to the state of ruin in mid-nineteenth century, the Cathedral of Santa Maria de Regla of León was subjected to a series of interventions on conservation, restoration and reconstruction that transformed it significantly. There have been several studies on the architects who took part in the restoration during the mentioned century and despite abundant documentation and research on this monument, it is surprising to note the lack of deep analysis in some of the periods. In particular, the interventions accomplished by Juan Bautista Lázaro, as chief architect of the works of the Cathedral of León, have not been documented and analysed in adequate depth, despite the outstanding recognition of his work nationally and internationally. Furthermore, up to date, only the director of this research had conducted a general research of all his architectural work. For these reasons, we felt it was appropriate to elaborate on the life and work of one of the most important architects of the restoration in Spain during that period, not only for his work itself, but also for his significant contribution to the debate on architectural interventions on heritage. He is notable for his respect to historical additions, his preference for not isolating the monuments, his interest in building systems and his continuous desire to re-cover the traditional crafts that were completely lost in the nineteenth century in Spain. The main aim of this thesis is therefore the descriptive and architectural analysis of Lázaro’s projects and interventions developed and executed for the Cathedral of León. The thesis identifies the principles and ideas that guided his work in this temple and establish the criteria for intervention in the historical and artistic heritage architecture he applied after studying its various print publications, projects and restoration works undertaken in other buildings. Accordingly, the thesis is structured in three parts: the first part where it deals Lázaro’s architectural thinking in his interventions on heritage constructions; the second one, in which analyses the projects and interventions carried out by Lazaro in the “pulchra leonina”, but this analysis is preceded by the description of Lázaro’s relationship with the Cathedral of León before taking charge of its restoration in 1892; and the third and final section, in which the study of major restoration interventions implemented by Lázaro in other buildings of Spanish architectural heritage is made. This research has used available documentation (in written or graphic form, plans or photographs) scattered in a diverse range of archives de-pendent on various civil and ecclesiastical institutions. Moreover, we could access the conservation and restoration works, currently being carried out in areas where Lázaro intervened (stained glass windows, forged iron en-closures, gates, doors, masonry, covers, etc.). It has been possible to ex-change views and opinions with the person currently in charge of the referred restoration works which has facilitated and complemented the development of this thesis. It further, it has allowed contrasting and obtaining data directly from the monument under study. Consultation of various architectural journals published in those years has also been taken into account, as well as a diversity of books and articles which concerned the buildings assessed in this work, or related to them. Also, although not with the results expected, it has been obtained the testimony of some of Lázaro’s descendants as well as descendants of the workers who operated under him. As a general conclusion, the thesis defines the general criteria that guided his professional work in the heritage for the first time. Furthermore, Juan Bautista Lázaro’s projects and interventions in the Cathedral of León are analysed in detail. Also, it has been studying in detail the Lazaro’s work in the architectural heritage. To achieve this goal, the thesis has studied not only the information from the official projects and technical reports of them, but also it has been tried to verify if the information contained in the different documents of the same project and in the drafts were related and consistent with each other. In addition, it has been attempted to per-form a comparative analysis of the execution of Lázaro’s projects and the entire projected content. This comparative study had not been done to date and this will be, therefore, one of the main contributions of this re-search. Finally, this thesis opens up three lines of investigation (that have already been discussed and partially advanced, but which fall beyond the scope of this research). These refer to the study of the evolution of the graphical representation of the plans of Leon Cathedral catalogued in this thesis, public activity of Lazaro and his concern for the defence of heritage as deputy in Parliament, municipal architect of Avila, and as diocesan architect Ávila and Toledo, and even more how its restoration actions in architectural heritage influenced his projects of new construction.

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Según Heidegger, la esencia de la arquitectura, de la construcción, descansa en un no espacio: en la materia con que se construyen las fronteras que otorgan espacios, irradiando sobre ellos aquello que los caracteriza. Si hay alguna materia, de las utilizadas por la arquitectura a lo largo de su historia para construir fronteras, que haya mantenido una especial relación con la luz y la visión, dando un carácter inconfundible a los espacios aviados por ellas, esta es el vidrio; algunas de las etimologías de su nombre: zakû (ser claro), hyalos (diáfano) o vitrum (ver), así lo evidencian. Posiblemente, sea la pregnancia de este modo fascinante de relacionarse con la luz, la que ha hecho del vidrio, a lo largo del tiempo que lleva siendo usado en arquitectura, y aún antes, el material que ha provocado en el imaginario humano la ilusión de ser aquel en que, en último término, podrían llegar a sublimarse todos los demás, dando lugar con ello a lo que en la tesis hemos denominado el sueño de la arquitectura de cristal. Siendo la luz, siempre, energía, consideraremos en la tesis luz-energía, a aquella que ilumina y calienta; es una luz científica y mesurable. Cuando la luz se “hace visible”, desvelando un mensaje “contenido” en el vidrio, hablaremos de luz-información. Esta luz, no puede medirse científicamente. La luz-energía y la luz-información, se manifiestan al conjuro de la arquitectura de vidrio. Es la segunda la que ha conformado las fronteras de vidrio enmascarado, y la que se estudia con más detenimiento en la tesis. Los distintos modos de usar en arquitectura la infinita combinatoria de las propiedades de absortancia, reflectancia, transmitancia y translucencia del vidrio, ha condicionado al hombre en su manera de “ver” el mundo. Unas veces, “inmerso” en él, puesto que solo lo separa del mismo, una frontera transparente, y “deseadamente” invisible: ese modo de usar el vidrio, ha sido el sueño imposible de una parte importante de la arquitectura del siglo XX. Otras veces, para “aislarse” de él, el hombre ha manipulado la luz y el vidrio para construir mundos diferentes. Las fronteras de vidrio enmascarado de color, mosaicos, vidrieras, pantallas y lo que hemos llamado vidrios complejos (con un cometido similar al que Schiller atribuía al coro en la tragedia griega, aislar a esta del “mundo real”, para mantener su libertad poética), son las fronteras que han construido el sueño posible de la arquitectura de cristal. Ambas actitudes, en distintos momentos de la historia de la arquitectura, han sido dos formas de querer materializar un mismo sueño. La capacidad del vidrio para adaptarse a tantos modos de presentarse ante nosotros, y a poder ser interpretado de tantas formas diferentes, es la que ha servido para dar título a la tesis, pues hasta en su faceta más transparente, el vidrio, de una forma o de otra, se ha mostrado siempre como un material enmascarado en el más amplio sentido de la palabra: se enmascara, incluso cuando apela a la transparencia o se convierte en espejo, para hacernos caer en la ilusión de que no está presente. Cuando el hombre construyó fronteras de vidrio e incluso antes, cuando soñó que con él podría llegar a construirlas, condensó en ellas toda la mítica, la mística y la epistemología en torno a la luz y la visión, dando lugar a una serie de arquetipos arquitectónicos. En la iglesia bizantina, la luz sobre, o la luz desde, los mosaicos, construyó una frontera titilante; y en la catedral gótica, la luz a través de las vidrieras construyó una frontera radiante; en ambos casos con el fin de alcanzar anagógicamente lo Inteligible. En el siglo XIX, con el descubrimiento de la electricidad y su incorporación a la arquitectura, las fronteras se vuelven fulgurantes, aviando, en este caso, el espacio urbano. Poco antes, en este mismo siglo, el espíritu del gótico tiene un efímero resurgir del que se nutrirá, a comienzos del siglo XX, el expresionismo cristalino, en el que la luz anagógica se hace laica. El espacio urbano fulgurante prefigurado por este movimiento y presente en las ciudades desde principios del siglo XX, fue potenciado a mediados de ese siglo con la aparición de las pantallas, extendiéndose desde entonces, imparable, por todo el planeta. La reciente emergencia de los vidrios complejos, ha abierto la posibilidad de construir fronteras a la carta (de vidrios de propiedades múltiples, seleccionadas de forma voluntaria y variable en cada momento). En principio, se pensó que, el uso de estos vidrios como cerramiento, podría llegar a constituirse como la panacea de los problemas del material relacionados con la luz-energía, sin necesidad de recurrir a “prótesis”, y manteniendo por tanto la seductora tersura de la fachada; aunque parece que, por ahora, esa posibilidad es, cuando menos, lejana. Sin embargo, en el campo de las megapantallas urbanas (y ,en general, en el de las pantallas de información), ubicuas actualmente en nuestras vidas, los vidrios complejos ayudan a construir los espesos velos de ilusión, que según Lefebvre sirven para mantener el capitalismo, siendo el último estadio de un desarrollo tecnológico, impuesto por el principio de economía del hombre, que como un metrónomo inexorable, y a modo de contrapunto, ha acompañado siempre (de nuevo en palabras de Lefebvre), a la necesidad del gasto, del juego, de la lucha, del arte, de la fiesta. La tecnología y el arte forman parte de la cultura producida por la sociedad y como señala Lévi-Strauss, esa cultura imprime orden; por el contrario, la sociedad, entendida como el conjunto de relaciones que los hombres mantienen entre sí, produce desorden. Del equilibrio entre esos extremos, surge el progreso, incluido el de la arquitectura. Las fronteras de vidrio que analizamos en la tesis –que avían espacios para la espiritualidad, el fasto y el espectáculo o, desde otro punto de vista, para las distintas manifestaciones del poder: la iglesia, la monarquía, el estado o el mercado– también han surgido de esa concomitancia entre el desorden y el orden; y forma parte de ese desorden, la aventura que ha impulsado al genio individual de místicos, alquimistas, geómetras, abades, reyes, inventores, poetas y arquitectos, a explorar, como escribe Apollinaire, vastos y extraños territorios donde el misterio en flor, se ofrece a quien quiera cogerlo, hogueras nuevas de colores nunca vistos, mil fantasmas imponderables a los que dar cuerpo. ABSTRACT According to Heidegger, the essence of architecture, building, lies in a non-space: the material that creates the boundaries from which something begins its presencing, radiating onto them that which characterizes them. If there is any single material amongst all those used throughout the history of architecture to build boundaries which has maintained a special relationship with light and vision, which has bestowed a distinctive character on spaces avid for them, it is glass. This is evidenced in some of its etymologies: zakû (to be clear), hyalos (transparent), vitrum (see). The rich potential of this fascinating way of relating to light in the history of the architectural use of glass, and even before, is possibly what has triggered the illusion in human imagination of being something that can ultimately sublimate all others, giving rise to what in this thesis we call The Dream of Crystal Architecture. Given that light is always energy, in this thesis we consider energy-light to be that which illuminates and warms. This is scientific, measurable light. When light "becomes visible" and reveals a message “contained” in glass, we speak of information-light. This light cannot be measured scientifically. Energy-light and information-light are manifested under the spell of glass architecture. The latter is what has shaped the boundaries of coloured glass, which is studied in this thesis. Architecture's different ways of using the infinite combinations of the absorptance, reflectance, transmittance and translucency of glass has affected the way we humans "see" the world. Sometimes we are "immersed" in it, since only an invisible, transparent boundary separates us from it: this use of glass has characterized a considerable part of 20th century architecture. In other cases, in order to "isolate" us from it, we have manipulated light and glass to build different worlds: the boundaries of glass "masked" by colour, mosaics, stained glass, screens and what we have called complex glazing, which plays a similar role to what Schiller attributed to the chorus in Greek tragedy, isolating it from the "real world" in order to maintain its poetic license. These are the boundaries that have built the viable dream of crystal architecture. These two approaches have been different ways of making same dream come true at different times in the history of architecture. The ability of glass to adapt to so many forms of manifestation, and interpretation, is what has given rise to the title of the thesis. Even in its most transparent facet, glass has one way or another always been a masking material in the broadest sense of the word: it is masked even when it invites transparency or becomes a mirror, triggering the illusion that it is not present. When man began to build glass boundaries, and even before, when he dreamed that he could build them, he condensed in them all the mythology, mysticism and epistemology concerning light and vision, which gave rise to a series of architectural archetypes. In the Byzantine church, light on or from mosaics created tenuous boundaries. In Gothic cathedrals, the light through the stained glass windows constructed radiant boundaries. In both cases the aim was to achieve, in an anagogical way, the Intelligible. In the 19th, the discovery of electricity and its use in architecture led to the production of dazzling boundaries, in this case employed in urban spaces. Earlier in the same century, the Gothic spirit had a short-lived revival, which in the early 20th century drew from crystalline expressionism in which anagogic light became secular. The dazzling urban space prefigured by this movement, present in cities since the early 20th century, was intensified in the mid-century with the emergence of screens, and since then it has spread unstoppably across the world. The recent emergence of complex glasses has made it possible to build boundaries on demand in glass with multiple properties, chosen at will and at whim at any time. Initially it was thought that the use of this glass as a wall could eventually become the panacea for the material problems related to energy-light, without needing to resort to "prosthesis" and thereby maintain the seductive smoothness of the facade. For now, that possibility seems remote, to say the least. In the realm of urban megascreens and information screens in general, now ubiquitous in our lives, complex glasses help to build the thick veils of illusion which, according to Lefebvre, serve to maintain capitalism. Like an inexorable metronome, in counterpoint, this ultimate state of technological development imposed by man's principle of economy has in fact always accompanied (again in the words of Lefebvre), the need to spend, play, fight, art, and party. Technology and art are part of the culture produced by society. As Levi-Strauss says, this culture imposes order. On the contrary, society, understood as a set of relationships amongst people, produces disorder. Progress, including that of architecture, arises from the balance between these two extremes. The glass boundaries analyzed in this thesis, which propitiate spaces for spirituality, pomp and spectacle or, from a different perspective, for the various manifestations of power: the church, the monarchy, the state and the market, have also emerged from the concomitance of order and disorder. One aspect of this disorder is the adventure that has inspired the individual genius of mystics, alchemists, surveyors, abbots, kings, inventors, poets and architects to explore, as Apollinaire says, vast, strange domains where flowering mystery offers itself to whoever wishes to pluck it, new fires, colours you have never seen before, a thousand intangible phantasms still awaiting reality.

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This paper studies the narrative stained glass cycle of the Life of Saint Mary the Egyptian at Bourges Cathedral within the context of prevailing—and often conflicting--civil and ecclesiastical attitudes toward sex, sexual sin, and prostitution in early thirteenth century France. Although the Church maintained that sexual sin was mortal sin, civil records suggest the public was skeptical. Through the example of a penitent harlot, this window, both structurally and in thematic content, attempts to map a doctrinally appropriate path from sexual sin to purity of spirit—and salvation—through complete submission to the Church and its clergy.