@article{722f118827874072970ba7c89b106179,
title = "Beginnings and Endings: Phoebe Stanton on Pugin's Contrasts: Phoebe stanton on pugin's contrasts",
author = "Holliday, {Kathryn E.}",
note = "Funding Information: When Phoebe Stanton died in 2003, her life{\textquoteright}s work, a monumental study of Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin, remained unpublished. Stanton was emeritus professor of art history at Johns Hopkins University and the recipient of the College Art Association{\textquoteright}s Distinguished Teaching Award in 1980. She was also deeply engaged with urban planning and design in Baltimore, serving as the first architecture critic for the Baltimore Sun beginning in 1971 and as a member for more than thirty years of Baltimore{\textquoteright}s Architectural Review Board (and its later incarnation the Design Advisory Panel).1 Her massive unpublished manuscript on Pugin updated and expanded her 1971 short monograph Pugin and completed the circle begun by her 1968 study of ecclesiological influences in America, The Gothic Revival and American Church Architecture: An Episode in Taste 1840–1856.2 Pugin{\textquoteright}s own life was brief, but when he died in 1852 at the age of 40 he had designed over 100 buildings, including, with Charles Barry, the Houses of Parliament in London, and published myriad books and articles. Stanton, in constructing her text, relied on obscure archival evidence and letters and notes between Pugin and his associates, as well as the hundreds of sketches and drawings Pugin left behind. The manuscript delves deeply into the religious and cultural context for Pugin{\textquoteright}s brief architectural career, as well as providing exhaustive accounts of his building designs and prolific publication record.",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1080/10464883.2012.720235",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "66",
pages = "128--137",
journal = "Journal of Architectural Education",
issn = "1046-4883",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Ltd.",
number = "1",
}