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・ Frederick Erdmann, Prince of Anhalt-Pless
・ Frederick Erickson
・ Frederick Ernest Appleyard
・ Frederick Ernest Burnham
・ Frederick Ernest James
・ Frederick Ernest Luff
・ Frederick Ernest of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
・ Frederick Ernest Osborne
・ Frederick Ernest Weiss
・ Frederick Ernst Melsheimer
・ Frederick Ernst Ruffini
・ Frederick Erroll, 1st Baron Erroll of Hale
・ Frederick Esling
・ Frederick Essen
・ Frederick Estcourt Bucknall
Frederick Etchells
・ Frederick Etchen
・ Frederick Eugene Wright
・ Frederick Eustace Barker
・ Frederick Evans
・ Frederick Eveleigh-de-Moleyns, 5th Baron Ventry
・ Frederick Evelyn
・ Frederick Exley
・ Frederick F. Backus
・ Frederick F. Campbell
・ Frederick F. Cornell
・ Frederick F. Faris
・ Frederick F. Faville
・ Frederick F. Henry
・ Frederick F. Houser


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Frederick Etchells : ウィキペディア英語版
Frederick Etchells

Frederick Etchells (14 September 1886 - 1973) was an English artist and architect.
== Biography ==

Etchells was born in Newcastle upon Tyne. His early education was through William Lethaby at the London School of Kensington, now known as The Royal College of Art, which brought him into contact with the Bloomsbury Group.
He was a contributor to the Omega Workshops, but was one of those breaking away with Wyndham Lewis; this breakaway began the Rebel Art Centre, with the Rebel Art Movement, somewhat akin to the Dadaists in Paris. The Rebel Art Movement transformed into the Vorticists several of his illustrations appeared in the issues of the literary magazine ''BLAST'' of which there were only two issues. There was a Manifesto, which not all of the artists involved signed up to; Etchells himself excluded his name from the manifesto. However William Roberts later painted Etchells holding the copy of ''BLAST'' in his work "The Vorticists at the Restaurant de la Tour Eiffel, Spring 1915". Roberts wrote to Etchells wanting to confront Lewis about his prominence in the authorship of the magazine, to which Etchells declined since he no longer wanted anything to do with it.〔Dickson, Malcolm. ''Etchells (1886-1973)'', 2005. Architectural Association Library. Interview with Susan Wyatt.〕 He, unlike many of the others from the Vorticists, remained acquainted with Roger Fry.
Etchells's most significant work is his translation of Le Corbusier's ''Vers une architecture'' known in its English title as ''Towards a New Architecture'': This has now been re-translated by John Goodman in his version ''Toward an Architecture'' 2007. Etchells later translated another book of Corbusier's ''Urbanisme'', which in its English translation became ''The City of Tomorrow''. He gradually moved into architecture after a period of book publication, with the Haslewood Press. Later he became a church and conservation architect. He had close associations with John Betjeman who was a tenant in one of his flats in Mayfair, this was during the period when Betjeman was a journalist with ''The Architectural Review''. One of his restorations was St Andrew's Church, Plymouth; he also restored St George's Church, Donnington, West Sussex after a fire in 1939, and St James's Church, Abinger Common, Surrey in 1950 after bomb damage during World War II.
He contributed articles to the journal ''The Studio.''
He was an active member of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB) and a founding member of the Georgian Group.
He was married to Hester Margaret Sainsbury who was a book illustrator, painter and artist known for her performances to music.

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