Sir Edwin Lutyens and Country Life, with Clive Aslet

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025

Комментарии • 50

  • @robert-wr6md
    @robert-wr6md 2 месяца назад

    What a throughly wonderful story, beautifully told. Thank you.

  • @le3423
    @le3423 Год назад +11

    Clive, I must say that the suggestion of this video came as a surprise, as this type of topic is very specific, but I couldn´t be more pleased. Your diction, variation of tempo and tone and of course content are fascinating and kept me hooked. What a treat!
    Like most people, obtaining information about a period you know little or nothing about seems pretty shallow on its own, but your inclusion of facts or details about history, art movements, family, personality, etc. puts everything into a context one ́s imagination helps visualize in such a way that one can sense the whole exerience, almost as if one were there.
    I almost instantly subscribed, having immediately recognized your beyond out of the ordinary talents. Forgive the exuberance, but as a Canadian born Spaniard, I am compelled to express myself in such a way. THANK YOU!!!!

  • @christophermaulden733
    @christophermaulden733 Год назад +15

    Excellent . Thoroughly enjoyed this . Enjoyable , entertaining , and educational . A delight for the senses .

    • @KeithAllan-b5h
      @KeithAllan-b5h Год назад +1

      Join the Lutyens Trust! Learn more, meet other 'Lut Nuts' and visit some of his buildings.

  • @neilobrien7307
    @neilobrien7307 Год назад +2

    Fascinating perfecty commentated exposition of Lutyens' life and work. I subscribed to this channel on the strength of it.

  • @tonypetts6663
    @tonypetts6663 Год назад +3

    Went to castle Drogo 34 years ago (actually on my honeymoon when we did a tour of the West country) that was where I first learned of Lutyens and fell in love with his architecture.

  • @michaeljames4904
    @michaeljames4904 Год назад +2

    Speaking as a commenter with a slightly longer attention-span than 15 seconds. I loved this.

  • @juliancoulden1753
    @juliancoulden1753 Год назад +4

    Wonderful and fascinating. Thank you for this extraordinary history of 2 amazing men.

  • @kateflies3930
    @kateflies3930 Год назад +1

    just checked... right about the bench..most beautiful bench I've ever seen...very lyrical... truly an icon..

  • @greghill7759
    @greghill7759 Год назад +5

    Thank you so much for this all too brief insight of a fascinating life. It would be inaccurate to say Lutyens is my favourite architect, as I have little knowledge of any others' work to compare. But I find his particular style stunning, (both private commissions and civic projects), and it has always left me keen to learn more about his life and work.

  • @RedcoatsReturn
    @RedcoatsReturn Год назад +2

    Thanks for educating me 😊👍👍 I love older architecture Elizabethan, Tudor, Baroque, Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian architecture indeed 😊

  • @whitby910
    @whitby910 Год назад +2

    Wonderful presentation. Thank you.

  • @teddyboysdontknit810
    @teddyboysdontknit810 Год назад +1

    I worked in that building in 1965 as a studio assistant in one of the three photographic studios in the basement. I recall the editors office and it looked the same as in your photo.

  • @kateflies3930
    @kateflies3930 Год назад

    As an American and lifelong Anglophile, I'm only at Timestamp 11, but finding this fascinating. Only knew the Lutyens name through the bench I believe he designed, could be wrong about that, but you give such an indepth and human aspect into the lives of people we only "know" through very small snapshots... looking forward to the next 41 minutes.. ;)

  • @andielines
    @andielines Год назад

    Thank You. Absolutely smashing and thoroughly interesting.

  • @kevinsenior8155
    @kevinsenior8155 Год назад

    Nice documentary, thanks. I used to live in Otford Kent, where the vicar in the 1920's was I believe a Brother of Lutyens. As a favour to the vicar, the great man designed the Village Hall. Take a look at it, and you will see it is a cut above other humble buildings of its type.

  • @Tuckerz5d
    @Tuckerz5d Год назад +4

    Very interesting, thank you so much. Just one note to emphasize that Jekyl designed the gardens at Munstead Wood, in fact, she owned the property for several years before commissioning the house and began establishing the gardens around the empty site where she wanted to build her house. By the time the house was completed it sat within an existing garden, as if it had been there for years. I believe Lutyens was only responsible for the formal bits at the entrance. It’s great news that the National Trust has recently acquired Munstead Wood.

  • @pvp72
    @pvp72 Год назад +1

    What an amazing discussion!!

  • @mmaximk
    @mmaximk Год назад

    Very enjoyable, thank you.

  • @Wanamaker1946
    @Wanamaker1946 Год назад +1

    The carved limestone fruit and shot birds draining are very Griddling Gibbons. He also designed some lovely buildings in South Africa and the British Embassy in USA.

  • @NimrodTargaryen
    @NimrodTargaryen Год назад

    Wonderful, thanx for sharing ❤❤❤

  • @barbarabauling7513
    @barbarabauling7513 Год назад

    I spent my primary years eating (truly horrible) school lunches at Tilford Institute, (not far from Thursley) little realising then that it had been designed by Edwin Lutyens :)

  • @manojkumar-qn3mw
    @manojkumar-qn3mw 9 месяцев назад +1

    Prithvi Raj Kapoor
    Cellular Jail no 44, Thihar
    GhainaGobardhanPur Jhangirabad UP
    H445, rehne na hum..

  • @haroldofcardboard
    @haroldofcardboard Год назад

    stekto rindoolah vin ovedoon roblikk marsapild. evoo~evoo, tongibill!

  • @mattschackart9941
    @mattschackart9941 Год назад +1

    Page has good taste

    • @blueninjasix
      @blueninjasix Год назад +1

      Plumpton Place AND Deanery Garden

  • @andrewcooney2387
    @andrewcooney2387 Год назад

    Interesting video but more of his work should have been shown in order to help understand this topic

  • @missmurrydesign7115
    @missmurrydesign7115 2 месяца назад +1

    Delicious...

  • @zandor5657
    @zandor5657 Год назад

    " We must live our lives by measure " ....... advice from Lutyens [?]

  • @Oldladysgin
    @Oldladysgin Год назад +1

    The War Memorials including the Centotaph, not a straight line on any of them, all slightly curved.

  • @wendysalter
    @wendysalter Год назад

    How can a display of dead birds be held as a measure of great architecture?
    The Classics emphasized the beauty of Nature.

  • @billybuck491
    @billybuck491 9 месяцев назад

    Omg … around the mulberry bush

  • @josephyoung6749
    @josephyoung6749 Год назад

    20:49

  • @pippipster6767
    @pippipster6767 Год назад

    I thought that was Arthur Lowe 😂

  • @bookaufman9643
    @bookaufman9643 Год назад

    Just looking at that portrait done by his father you can see why his dad had little success. The left ear is badly painted and the eyes are uneven so even though at first glance it looks like a very decent portrait it's far from being well done. I understand why he didn't get a lot of commissions.

  • @jakecavendish3470
    @jakecavendish3470 Год назад +1

    I appreciate the effort but it wasn't terribly clear or concise presentation; it may have benefitted from a bit of a script edit/structure or some kind of post-production edit or something because it's all a bit rambling and discursive?

  • @xyzllii
    @xyzllii 11 месяцев назад

    I get no overall visual idea of his work...or the gardens of Jekyll from this wordy video. Terrible dreary presentation.

  • @VancouverVortex
    @VancouverVortex Год назад +10

    I’m sorry but I found the rambling circular dissertation lost my attention. Which was surprising as I’m quite interested in the topic.

    • @richardharrisson5250
      @richardharrisson5250 Год назад +2

      Yes... unfortunately this is all too true. How could anyone make such an intrinsically interesting subject so rambling and tiresome. A great pity.

    • @jakecavendish3470
      @jakecavendish3470 Год назад

      ​@@richardharrisson5250 Agree

    • @alexandradane3672
      @alexandradane3672 Год назад +16

      Pay attention and focus - it might make it easier for you and you might even learn something from Clive Aslett , a most erudite and informed man . And no, he doesn’t give simple talks and lectures for the uninitiated or those poor of comprehension , for which we can be grateful.

    • @MattM-ce3qe
      @MattM-ce3qe Год назад

      What dreadful manners you have!

    • @thesmallerhalf1968
      @thesmallerhalf1968 Год назад +4

      That appears to be largely your loss. I find the style of dissertation engaging and informative, albeit that it requires some attention.

  • @markholroyde9412
    @markholroyde9412 Год назад

    Interesting but you do know hundreds of folk could do this...houses, its not hard, none of them hold a candle compared to Wainhouse tower the highest follly in the World where I live...built in 1841