Fotografía de autor

Margaret Dickens Whinney (1897–1975)

Autor de Wren

11 Obras 182 Miembros 0 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Obras de Margaret Dickens Whinney

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Whinney, Margaret Dickens
Fecha de nacimiento
1897-02-04
Fecha de fallecimiento
1975
Género
female
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugares de residencia
London, England, UK
Educación
University of London (Art ∙ 1935)
Ocupaciones
art and architectural historian
Relaciones
Dickens, Charles (great grandfather)
Blunt, Anthony (supervisor and co-author)
Borenius, Tancred (mentor)
Organizaciones
Courtauld Institute of Art
Victoria and Albert Museum
Walpole Society
Society of Antiquaries
Premios y honores
FBA, 1967
Biografía breve
Margaret Dickens Whinney was the daughter of architect Thomas Bostock Whinney and his wife Sydney Margaret Dickens. She attended private schools before entering the University of London, from which she graduated in 1935. Her first article on art history appeared while she was still an undergraduate. Margaret Whinney joined the staff of the new Courtauld Institute of Art, doing a variety of small jobs, including managing the slide library, intending to work her way up into a higher position, still difficult for a woman during that period. She continued her studies at the Courtauld, and developed an interest in architectural history. The Courtauld closed for a year at the start of World War II, and reopened in 1940 with Margaret Whinney in charge. The same year, the research she had done on 17th-century drawings was accepted for a D. Litt. at the University of London. After the war, Anthony Blunt assumed the directorship of the Institute. Dr. Whinney was made a Reader at the Courtauld in 1950 and with Anthony Blunt edited a guide to the public art collections in the UK. In 1957, she and Oliver Millar wrote the volume on the period 1625-1714 for the Oxford History of English Art series. Dr. Whinney was then asked to write the Pelican History of Art volume on British Sculpture from the Renaissance to the Nineteenth Century, which was published in 1964. The same year, she retired from the Courtauld Institute. She co-authored with Rupert Gunnis the catalog on the models of John Flaxman at University College, London, and independently wrote a book on early Flemish painting. In 1971, Dr. Whinney wrote an introductory book on Christopher Wren.

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Estadísticas

Obras
11
Miembros
182
Popularidad
#118,785
Valoración
½ 3.5
ISBNs
10
Idiomas
1

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