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  1. Smarthistory – Charles Barry and A.W.N. Pugin, Palace of Westminster (Houses of Parliament) Charles Barry and A.W.N. Pugin, Palace of Westminster (Houses of Parliament) by Dr. Beth Harris and Dr. Steven Zucker. Unsettled by industrialization and the ugliness of the modern world, Victorians looked back to the Gothic style.

  2. All three men would later work on the new Palace of Westminster. It was also in Birmingham that Barry developed his non-ecclesiastical Gothic Revival style. When Barry won the competition to design the new Palace of Westminster, he could not have known that the project would dominate the rest of his life.

  3. Works of art in the Palace. Works of art in the Palace. The Palace of Westminster was designed not just to be a working building for the Lords and Commons but also to offer a striking panorama of British history. Everywhere in the building there are statues, frescoes, murals and pictures connected with parliamentary history and famous politicians.

  4. Jun 20, 2016 · Completed in 1867 in London, United Kingdom. At 6:20pm on the evening of October 16, 1834, a fire began in the old Palace of Westminster in London – the foremost seat of parliamentary governance...

    • Luke Fiederer
    • who chose the palace of westminster paintings known as . the natural1
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  5. 1226284. The Palace of Westminster is the meeting place of the Parliament of the United Kingdom and is located in London, England. It is commonly called the Houses of Parliament after the House of Commons and the House of Lords, the two legislative chambers which occupy the building. The palace is one of the centres of political life in the ...

  6. One of these series consists of views of the Palace of Westminster, home of the British Parliament, and he began the first of these paintings at about 15.45 on 13 February 1900. [2] All of the series' paintings share the same viewpoint from Monet's window or a terrace at St Thomas' Hospital overlooking the Thames and the approximate canvas size of 81 cm × 92 cm (32 in × 36 3/8 in).

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  8. Apr 27, 2014 · Claude Monet painted a series of paintings of the Palace of Westminster, home of the British Parliament, during his stays in London between the years 1900-1905. The paintings have all the same size and viewpoint, Monet’s window at St Thomas’ Hospital overlooking the Thames. They are however painted at different times of the day and at ...

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