Annie Verona "Veronica" Barry Hughart (1907-1977) is an artist, architectural designer and journalist based in Tucson, Arizona and is an active part of the Old Fort Lowell Art colony.
Video Veronica Hughart
Kehidupan
Hughart was born in Idaho to Ernest Zimmerman Barry and Annie Lee Frazelle. He attended North Carolina and lived in Illinois and Connecticut. In 1931 he married John Harding Page. He moved to a farm near Willcox, Arizona in 1943. He purchased and operated a guest farm H Cross near Bonita before moving to Tucson in 1951.
In 1954 Hughart bought a three-room shell adobe at Fort Lowell Road. With the help of his twin sons, Peter and writer Barry Hughart, he transformed the structure into what was mentioned in the Arizona Daily Star in 1957, "a small house with unusual charm, easy to compact while showing the spaciousness of a single principle appears to guide everything he does, every situation is unique.In his architectural work, he constantly adjusts traditional ideas to meet certain needs: he is the last master who makes what he needs from what he has in his hands. " Fort Lowell's house was designed by modern sculptor Tucson and artist Charles Clement.
Hughart is a shameless fan of the original Arizona-Sonoran architecture and building materials. In the early 1950s he wrote a national newspaper column called "What A Women Thinks." He studied architecture and designed or rebuilt more than 30 Tucson homes between 1956 and his death. Hughart died in Tucson, Arizona in 1977.
Maps Veronica Hughart
Work
- Veronica Hughart House (Lowell Old Fort, Tucson, Arizona)
- Germaine Cheruy and RenÃÆ'à © Cheruy House Supplement (Old Fort Lowell, Tucson, Arizona)
- S. Bayard Colgate House (Tucson, Arizona)
- Josias Joesler 2nd House (W. H. Loerpabels Besides) (Poets Corner, Tucson, Arizona)
- Speculative House of James F. Eager (Flecha Caida Estates, Tucson, Arizona)
- Addition of Daniel Davis House (Tucson, Arizona)
- The House of John H. Hansen (Tucson, Arizona) 1963
- Nora Pickrell House, (Tucson, Arizona)
- Barton Cross House, (Tucson, Arizona) 1969
References
Turner, Teresa, The People of Fort Lowell, Fort Historic Historic District Board
Arizona Daily Star, Artist, Designer Veronica Hughart Dies of Cancer, August 4, 1977
External links
- [1] Working at Old Fort Lowell
Source of the article : Wikipedia