The Chateau Tahbilk Vineyard Company's Exhibit at the 1888 Exhibition
Great Hall, Great Hall exhibition, 1888, gothic, gothic revival, neo-gothic, exhibit, exhibition, display, 1888 Exhibition, wine, wine industry, winery, vine, vineyard, castle turret, Chateau Tahbilk
Engraving in The Illustrated Australian News of the Chateau Tahbilk Vineyard's exhibit at the 1888 Great Hall Exhibition. The exhibit was made to look like with a medieval-style tower, complete with crenellation.
Anon.
The Illustrated Australian News
The Illustrated Australian News
15 November 1888
The Illustrated Australian News
Engraving [orig.];
Hyperlink
English
The New Queen's College
University of Melbourne, university, Melbourne, Queen's College, gothic architecture, gothic revival, neo-gothic, gothic, architecture, architect, gothic building, W.A. Quick, E.H. Sugden
An engraving depicting the then new appearance of Queen's College at the University of Melbourne in 1888. Either side of the gothic style building are the portraits of the architects, Rev. W.A. Quick and E.H. Sugden.
Anon.
The Illustrated Australian News
The Illustrated Australian News
31 March 1888
Out of Copyright
Engraving [orig.];
PDF
The Great Hall of the Exhibition on the 1st of August
Great Hall Exhibition, 1888, Great Hall, gothic building, gothic, gothic revival, neo-gothic, gothic architecture, architecture, architect, exhibition
Engraving in the Illustrated Australian News of the Great Hall as it appeared during the exhibition of 1888.
Anon.
The Illustrated Australian News
The Illustrated Australian News
15 August 1888
No Copyright
Engraving [orig.];
Hyperlink
Design for the Town Hall, Brunswick
architecture, architect, gothic, gothic architecture, gothic revival, neo-gothic, gothic building, gothic buildings, Brunswick, town hall, Brunswick town hall, Melbourne, Samuel Calvert, engraving, The Illustrated Australian News, VIC, Victoria
This engraving by Samuel Calvert appeared in The Illustrated Australian News on June 23, 1888. It shows the neo-gothic design for the Town Hall in the Melbourne suburb of Brunswick.
Calvert, Samuel
The Illustrated Australian News
The Illustrated Australian News
23 June 1888
No Copyright
Engraving [orig.]; Hyperlink
In and Around Adelaide
architecture, gothic, gothic revival, neo-gothic, gothic architecture, gothic building, gothic buildings, engraving, monument, monuments, Adelaide, tourism, early tourism, Colonel Light's monument, SA, South Australia, Victoria Square
A page of engravings depicting notable landmarks and monuments in Adelaide at the end of the nineteenth century. One notices a strong gothic influence in the appearance of Colonel Light's monument and some of the buildings in Victoria Square.
Anon.
The Illustrated Australian News
The Illustrated Australian News
28 July 1887
No Copyright
Engraving [orig.]; Hyperlink
Old Convict Church, Port Arthur, Tasmania
convict church, church, Christian, Christianity, convict, Port Arthur, Tasmania, gothic, gothic revival, neo-gothic, gothic architecture, architecture, engraving, turrets, crenelation
This atmospheric engraving from 1887 in The Illustrated Australian News depicts the gothic architectual style, including crenellation and turrets, of the 'Old Convict Church' at the penal settlement of Port Arthur in Tasmania.
Anon.
The Illustrated Australian News
The Illustrated Australian News
8 January 1887
No Copyright
Engraving [orig.]; Hyperlink
English
The Design for the Federal Coffee Palace, Collins Street West Melbourne
Federal Coffee Palace, Melbourne, Victoria, architecture, gothic architecture, gothic revival, neo-gothic
An engraving featured in <em>The Illustrated Australian News </em>of a design for the Federal Coffee Palace in West Melbourne. The gothic style of the design is very typical of nineteenth century architecture in Australia and other nations with British colonial influences. <br />
Anon.
The Illustrated Australian News
The Illustrated Australian News
24 July 1886
The Illustrated London News
Engraving [orig.];
PDF
Tower with Lancet Windows, St. Joseph's Church, Subiaco
St. Joseph, Saint Joseph, Perth, Western Australia, WA, Subiaco, church, Catholic, Catholicism, Catholic church, Christian, Christianity, lancet window, lancet windows, lancet arch, leadlight window, leadlight windows, lead-light window, lead-light windows, window, windows, stained glass, stained glass window, stained glass windows, tower, spire, architecture, architect, Archbishop Clure, C.W. Arnot, Edgar Le Blond Henderson, gothic architecture, gothic revival, neo-gothic, gothic, Inter-War Gothic, cross, tracery, bar tracery, heritage, heritage listed, Archdiocese, Archdiocese of Perth
<div class="element-text">
<p>St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church in Subiaco, Western Australia was designed by architect Edgar L. B. Henderson and built by C. W. Arnot between 1933 and 1937. It is constructed from red brick and pressed cement in an inter-war gothic style common of the 1920s and 1930s. It exhibits many features common to gothic architecture, including pointed gothic arches, lancet windows, elaborate bar tracery in the stained glass windows and blind tracery on the tympana of the doorways, and a large tower and spire.</p>
<div class="element-text">
<p>The windows of St Joseph’s are a mixture of the early gothic style single (or standalone), lancet windows, collections of two or three single windows positioned side by side, and also the later gothic trend of enclosing multiple lancet windows beneath one arch and separating them with mullions to form larger windows and allow for more light to enter the church.</p>
<p>In 2001, the church and presbytery were placed on the Heritage list for WA.</p>
For a timeline of the church's history, see <a href="http://www.stjosephssubiaco.org.au/our-parish/history/">http://www.stjosephssubiaco.org.au/our-parish</a></div>
</div>
McEwan, Joanne
14 February 2011
No Copyright
Digital Photograph