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Visual Planning and the Picturesque

  • Nikolaus Pevsner
    Edited by Mathew Aitchison

    "If the whole of a town is in the end not visually pleasing, the town is not worth having."
    —Nikolaus Pevsner

    This previously unpublished work by Nikolaus Pevsner (1902–1983), one of the twentieth-century's most widely read scholars of art and architectural history, was begun in the mid-1940s. The unfinished manuscript is something of an anomaly in his vast oeuvre of writings in so far as it sought to complement the body of thought emerging in postwar Britain that was concerned with urban design, generally referred to as "Townscape."

    As assembled and annotated here, Visual Planning and the Picturesque comprises three parts. The first part analyzes English planning tradition before 1800. The second surveys English planning theory or, by Pevsner's lights, the theory of the picturesque. The third part is essentially a meditation on how this tradition and this theory shaped architecture and urban planning in England in the nineteenth century and, potentially, the twentieth as well. The work as a whole is a surprisingly fresh plea for a visual approach to urban design and common sense in architecture, one that sought to incorporate and mediate rather than idealize and exclude.

    Nikolaus Pevsner was a German-born British scholar of the history of art and architecture best known for his forty-six-volume series of comprehensive county guides, The Buildings of England. He received a knighthood in 1969. Mathew Aitchison is a lecturer in architecture and urban design at Queen's University Belfast.

    "A blend of pragmatism and nostalgia for an idealized landscape." 
    —The Financial Times

    232 pages
    7 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
    100 b/w illustrations
    ISBN 978-1-60606-001-8
    hardcover

    Getty Publications
    Imprint: Getty Research Institute

    2010

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