Jump to content

Alfred Hoare Powell

Daga Wikipedia, Insakulofidiya ta kyauta.
Alfred Hoare Powell
Rayuwa
Haihuwa Reading (mul) Fassara, 14 ga Afirilu, 1865
ƙasa Birtaniya
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Mutuwa 1960
Karatu
Harsuna Turanci
Sana'a
Sana'a Masanin gine-gine da zane
Mamba Guild of St George (en) Fassara

Alfred Hoare Powell (1865 – 1960) ƙwararren mai zane ne na Fasaha da Sana'o'in Ingila, kuma mai tsarawa da mai zane na tukwane .

Rayuwar farko, ilimi, da kuma aiki

[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]

An haifi Alfred Powell a Reading, Berkshire, a ranar 14 ga Afrilu, 1865, ɗan Thomas Edward Powell da Emma Corrie.

Powell ɗalibi ne na gine-gine na John Dando Sedding, yana aiki a cikin al'adar "ƙirar Gothic" wadda mai suka da masanin falsafa John Ruskin ya yi wahayi zuwa gare ta.

An yi masa auren ɗan lokaci da Olive Garnett, marubuciyar littafin tarihin rayuwa a shekarar 1897. Powell ya auri Ada Louise Powell, wacce aka haifa a shekarar Lessore (1882–1956); 'yar wani mai fasaha, ta yi karatun dinki, rubutun hannu da kuma haskakawa . [ <span title="what is &quot;illuminating&quot;? (July 2024)">ana buƙatar bayani</span> ]

Alfred da Louise Powell sun shahara a matsayin masu zane-zanen tukwane na Wedgwood . Sun zana dubban zane-zane da hannu kuma sun horar da "masu fenti" don Wedgwood. Sun haɗu kan farfaɗo da fasaha da sana'o'i, sun ƙi masana'antu da ƙira kayan ado na kayan daki, kayan ado da tukwane, da kuma ƙarfafa ruhin al'umma a Kudancin Cotswolds .

Powell, tare da ƙaramin mai zane Norman Jewson, shine babban abokin Ernest Gimson da 'yan'uwan Ernest da Sidney Barnsley a Sapperton, a Gloucestershire, a cikin farfaɗo da Cotswold Arts and Crafts. Ya zauna kusa da Gurners Farm, Oakridge Lynch a 1902, amma ya sayar da gidan a 1916, ya koma The Thatched House, Tunley kusa da Oakridge, a cikin shekarun 1920, daga baya ya zauna a Tarlton kusa da Rodmarton .

Ya yi aiki tare da Detmar Blow da FW Troup na National Trust da kuma Society for the Protection of Old Buildings .

Tiles ɗin murhu da Powell ya tsara

[1]

  1. Drury 2000, pp. 45–61.