Cottage Orne: Difference between revisions
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==Cottage Orné In The Arts & Media= | ==Cottage Orné In The Arts & Media== | ||
<gallery mode | <gallery mode=packed> | ||
File:Cottage-EmilySutton.jpg | File:Cottage-EmilySutton.jpg|’Cottage’, by contemporary artist Emily Sutton. | ||
File:CottageinSussex-Ravilious.jpeg|‘Cottage in Sussex', Eric Ravilious 1928 | |||
File:CottagesAtBurghclere-StanleySpencer.jpeg|‘Cottages at Burghclere’ by Stanley Spencer 1927-30 | |||
</gallery> | |||
==See Also In Chimni== | ==See Also In Chimni== | ||
Latest revision as of 21:45, 13 July 2021
Cottage Orné (pronounced 'ornay') was a nostalgic building style pioneered by the architect John Nash in Regent's Park and at Blaise Hamlet in Bristol. It was used to great effect in Victorian housing schemes like Holly Village in Hampstead London.
Cottage Orné In The Arts & Media[edit]
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’Cottage’, by contemporary artist Emily Sutton.
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‘Cottage in Sussex', Eric Ravilious 1928
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‘Cottages at Burghclere’ by Stanley Spencer 1927-30
See Also In Chimni[edit]
Other Interesting Sites[edit]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/3316544/Gateway-to-another-world.html