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selected perspective of projected mausoleum for frederick, prince of wales, 1752
William Chambers was among the first British designers to respond to Piranesi during the 1750s. This design for a mausoleum for Frederick, Prince of Wales (d. March 1751), is one of the earliest known drawings to show a projected design in a landscape setting.
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Bank of England. Perspective of the 3% Consols Office,
Sir John Soane |
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clock in the egyptian style
Thomas Hope |
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design for a doorway to the grand gallery of the villa albani
Carlo Marchionni |
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design for a table with monopods, plate 38 in recueil des décorations intérieures
Charles Percier & Pierre-Francois-Léonard Fontaine |
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Design for the Cardinals’ Stadium, Glendale, Arizona
Peter Eisenman |
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design for two andirons and a sconce of gilt bronze for the pavilion de bagatelle, paris
Jean-Démosthéne Dugourc |
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Doncaster Race Cup
Rebecca Emes and Edward Barnard |
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Egyptian or Black room, duchess street, london, from household furniture and interior decoration, 1807
Giovanni Battista Piranesi |
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Episcopal Academy Chapel
Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates |
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Project for a Metropole
Etienne-Louis Boullée |
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Section of the long side of entrance hall at Syon House, Middlesex, in Works in Architecture of Robert and James Adam, Vol. II
Gift of the James Smithson Society |
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sepulcher in egyptian style with caryatids and a lion
Louis-Jean Desprez |
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Temple of Justice
Jean-Charles Delafosse |
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view of consuls transfer office for the bank of england
Joseph Michael Gandy |






















