Welcome to RIBApix!
You have no items in your basket.
Close
Filters
Search

Music rooms

View as Grid List
Sort by

Pine House, Churt, Surrey: the music room

RIBA3797
Freud, Ernst Ludwig (1892-1970)

Cobham Hall, Kent: the Gilt Hall (Music Room)

RIBA7749
Wyatt, James (1746-1813)

Royal Pavilion, Brighton: the Music Room

RIBA10872
Crace, Frederick (1779-1859)
SOURCE: John Nash. The Royal Pavilion at Brighton (London, 1826), pl. 16 NOTES: The Royal Pavilion was built as a seaside retreat for the then Prince Regent (later King George IV). Originally the 'Marine Pavilion', a Neo-Classical building designed by Henry Holland and completed in 1787, it was transformed into this Indian style building by John Nash in 1815-1822. Using new technology, Nash enlarged the building and added the domes and minarets by superimposing a cast iron framework over Holland's pavilion. The Music Room was decorated by Frederick Crace.

Pine House, Churt, Surrey: the music room

RIBA14251
Freud, Ernst Ludwig (1892-1970)

Schloss Sanssouci, Potsdam: the elaborately decorated music room

RIBA15962
Hoppenhaupt, Johann, Michael, II (b. 1709)
NOTES: Sanssouci was the summer palace of Frederick the Great, King of Prussia. Built above a terraced vineyard in 1745-1747, it is essentially a single-storey villa, containing ten principal rooms. Much of the interior decoration of the music room was by the sculptor and decorator Johann Michael Hoppenhaupt (the elder).

Schloss Sanssouci, Potsdam: detail of the gilt work on a candelabra in the music room

RIBA15963
Hoppenhaupt, Johann, Michael, II (b. 1709)
NOTES: Sanssouci was the summer palace of Frederick the Great, King of Prussia. Built above a terraced vineyard in 1745-1747, it is essentially a single-storey villa, containing ten principal rooms. Much of the interior decoration of the music room was by the sculptor and decorator Johann Michael Hoppenhaupt (the elder).

Design for a house for an art lover: the music room with panels by Margaret MacDonald

RIBA16056
Macdonald, Margaret (1864-1933)
SOURCE: Haus eines Kunstfreundes (Darmstadt, 1902), pl. 7
Categories
Close
)
CLOSE