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| | Literary Encyclopedia: Baillie, Joanna |
 | | Perhaps it was the very stability of Baillie’s serene and secluded life that gave her the courage to depict the darker side of human nature with objective, unflinching honesty and to defend her ethical and artistic principles to the end. |  | | Baillie’s plan in writing her Plays on the Passions was to trace the structure of each human passion, from its faint beginnings to its most chaotic heights, in one tragedy and one comedy. |  | | Baillie remained an energetic and robust individual who delighted audiences of young friends with a “multitude of wonderful tales”(Dramatic and Poetical Works vii). |
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http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=219
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| | Baillie Bibliography (Bugajski) |
 | | States that Baillie's plays are "better suited to the sober perusal of the closet than the bustle and animation of the theatre." Praises Baillie's moral example, Christian faith, and her clear and forceful style. |  | | In the chapter on Baillie, demonstrates that she critiques gender "not as a biological function but as a cultural practice." Citing Mary Wollstonecraft, Maria Edgeworth, Mary Hays, Hannah More, and Clara Reeves, shows an oppressor/oppressed relationship between genders to be a widespread concern of nineteenth-century women. |  | | Briefly considers Baillie's poetry, and states that, although contemporaries overrated her poetry, they believed that Baillie produced a "moral influence" on literature. |
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http://www.c18.rutgers.edu/biblio/baillie.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | Scottish poet, playwright, and critical theorist Joanna Baillie (1762-1851) commanded the attention of readers and audiences until the end of the nineteenth century, after which she was obscured for most of the twentieth century. |  | | Finally, Baillie's remembrance of friend Justina Milligan rings of her early Romantic poetry as she describes Milligan's country abode in Gloucestershire and recalls spots of time when Milligan's "buoyant spirits" seemed the result of nature which looked on and rendered a Christian peace long before her death. |  | | Baillie followed Ahalya Baee with a final collection of her complete works, The Dramatic and Poetical Works of Joanna Baillie, published in 1851 shortly before her death. |
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http://www.alexanderstreet2.com/SWRPLive/bios/S7020-D001.html
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| | Scott Wickstein |
 | | But for those of you that have lashed out and bought some of his books, he has flashes of insights into the nature of humanity that are quite profound, once you have dug up the comedy. |  | | AUTHOR: scott wickstein DATE: 12:09 AM ----- BODY: Stephen Green is venturing into a more essay-writing style of blogging, and his look back at the 1970's suggests he's good at it. |  | | Arthur Silber writes a defence which suggests I might have to read her and make up my own mind. |
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http://scottwickstein.blogspot.com
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| | Romanticism On the Net 21 (February 2001) |
 | | Readers of Baillie's tragedy are impelled to confront their false opinions, for within the world of the play, the spectre huntsman is revealed as mere lore, and metadramatically, Orra unmasks medical accounts of female hysteria as fictive. |  | | Like Baillie's tragedy, Scott's comedy takes place in a foreign setting, the rustic mountains of Spain, probably sometime during the Reconquest, perhaps between 1248 and 1492, a time when superstition not science provides explanations for spirits. |  | | The conditions that facilitate the actual appearance of Baillie's techno-gothic ghost are discursively constructed in the story of Count Hugo, Orra's ancestor who murdered a noble knight, frequently found hunting in the Black Forest. |
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http://www.erudit.org/revue/ron/2001/v/n21/005968ar.html
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| | Isle of Man Government Manx National Heritage: - Mackay hugh Baillie Scott |
 | | Although properties here are not depicted this is an account of his views and style of work. |  | | Brief pamphlet produced by the present owner on this early example of Scott’s work. |  | | Illustrated account in German but with an English translation by Rachael McGeagh and Nicholas Johnston (1953). |
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http://www.gov.im/mnh/heritage/library/bibliographies/bailliescott.xml
(1372 words)
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| | M Baillie Scott ( - ) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews |
 | | Captain William Baillie, [Christ healing the sick] (Copy), 18th century |  | | van Rijn, Dutch, 1606-1669 Reworked by Capt. William Baillie, English, 1723-1792 Christ Preaching |  | | van Rijn, Dutch, 1606-1669 Retouched by Capt. William Baillie, English, 1723-1792 Christ Preaching |
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http://wwar.com/masters/b/baillie_scott-m.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | Grant of Laggan, as she was more commonly known at the time, is now probably the least familiar of the trio, although contemporaries would have seen nothing odd about grouping her with Scott and Baillie as one of the pre-eminent Scottish poets of her day. |  | | A heavily edited version of this letter appears in Memoir and Correspondence (letter 147 in the 1844 edition and letter 110 in the 1845 edition), but this passage has been cut. |  | | This success was based upon a relatively compact body of writing. |
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http://www.alexanderstreet2.com/SWRPlive/bios/S7024-D001.html
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| | Blackwell the Arts and Crafts House, Lake District - Baillie Scott |
 | | Baillie Scott moved to the Isle of Man in 1889 after the wedding trip he made with his new wife Florence. |  | | Although both these men influenced Baillie Scott, he went on to forge his own distinctive style. |  | | Here he established his own architectural practice and the isolation of being away from the mainland led him to develop his own particular architectural style as can be seen in the houses he built there. |
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http://www.blackwell.org.uk/bailliescott.shtml
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| | Baillie Scott: Information From Answers.com |
 | | Baillie Scott produced a considerable body of work, including Red House, Isle of Man; Majestic Hotel, Onchan, Isle of Man; Winscombe House, Crowburgh, Sussex; and Oakhams in 1942. |  | | At the beginning of his career Baillie Scott worked with Fred Saunders, with whom he had studied at the Isle of Man School of Art, which is also in Douglas. |  | | His grave stone reads: "Nature he loved and next to nature art". |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/baillie-scott
(385 words)
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| | Scott Nearing |
 | | The Good Life: Helen and Scott Nearings Sixty Years of Self-Sufficient Living |  | | The Maple Sugar Book: Pioneering As a Way of Living in the Twentieth Century |  | | Hundreds of faithful anti-war believers flocked to Nearings home in Maine to hear the master radicals anti-war message.As he approached his first century, Nearing was hardworking and still in perfect health. |
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http://www.isbnbookssearch.com/872578_scott-nearing_0836959922anthraciteaninstanceofnaturalresourcemonopolyusedtextbookscollege.html
(608 words)
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| | Heath Close and Waterlow Court |
 | | What is peculiarly Baillie Scott himself is the softness and gentleness of the proportions; for example, his roofs have a curious comforting depth, which Mr. |  | | Baillie Scott practised in the Isle of Man until 1903 and there is an element of the Celtic faery in his designs, mingling stark originality with sentimental whimsy. |  | | The courtyard shows Baillie Scott at his starkest, with sheer unbroken white plaster walls and smooth undecorated round-arched cloisters. |
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http://www.hgs.org.uk/tour/tour00014000.html
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| | Christopher Wood - Art Consultant & Historian |
 | | Abbotsford was the home of the poet and novelist, Sir Walter Scott. |  | | The large library contains his reading stand, and the celebrated urn given to him by Byron, one of his proudest possessions. |  | | His house, which survives virtually untouched, and still belongs to his descendants, is therefore of enormous interest to anyone interested in understanding the Victorians, and the Pre-Raphaelites. |
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http://www.christopherwoodgallery.com/pages/report.cfm?start=3
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| | Purcell and Elmslie |
 | | Wright undoubtedly knew Baillie Scott's work and recognized that this man was in tune with the vital forces being released in building. |  | | Baillie Scott's book [Houses and Gardens (1906)] published about this time shows a great deal of what we call plastic treatment of both the larger design elements and of interior finish. |  | | There is much correspondence in both feeling and detail between the work of Scott and Wright prior to 1900, but Wright's mind was dealing with the while range of building, while Scott, whatever he may have been thinking, found expression largely in domestic architecture. |
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http://www.organica.org/pejn5_1.htm
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| | Baillie, Joanna |
 | | Plays of Passion (1798); Fugitive Pieces (1790); Metrical Legends of Exalted Characters (1821); A Collection of Poems (1823); The Martyr (1826); The Bride (1828); A View of the General Tenor of the New Testament (1831); Lines on the Death of Sir Walter Scott (1832); Miscellaneous Plays (1834); Dramas, 3 vols. |  | | Baillie's first poetry collection, published anonymously in 1790, was called "Fugitive Pieces" (and has no connection with the novel by Ann Michaels!). |  | | She enjoyed a great reputation as a dramatist, and was praised by Sir Walter Scott. |
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http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/B/bailliejoanna/1.html
(152 words)
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| | SPA feature |
 | | It was his honeymoon in 1889, however, that took him to the Isle of Man - and his sense of humour that prompted him to wisecrack that the ensuing 12 year stay resulted from his being so seasick, he couldn't face the journey back. |  | | But Baillie Scott had more innovative ideas in his head than could be explored in such commissions, so he resolved to develop plans for his own house. |  | | Illustrations of virtually everything he designed were submitted to the journals of the day and were published from as early as 1890. |
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http://www.spa.uk.net/bs.htm
(675 words)
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| | Architectural Review, The: Baillie Scott: The Artistic House. - book reviews |
 | | We must hope that a second edition of Hitchmough's excellent text and Charles' stunning photographs will be more intelligently put together. |  | | Academy Editions do much better, in this respect, with Diane Haigh's study of Baillie Scott. |  | | Baillie Scott can easily be written off as a Voysey follower and a person who was ready to bend with the wind of fashion. |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m3575/is_n1186_v198/ai_17843649
(831 words)
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| | Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott: An Overview |
 | | [Information about Greg Slater's new book on Baillie Scott] |  | | Baillie Scott's thoughts in relation to decorative design are summarised in his book, Houses and Gardens (1933). |  | | In 1889 Baillie Scott married, and went to Douglas, Isle of Man where he set up his own practice as an architect Here he got to know Archibald Knox, the designer, and collaboroted with him an the design of stained glass and fire grates to embellish the houses which he was building on the island |
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http://www.victorianweb.org/art/design/bailliescott/mhbsov.html
(356 words)
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| | www.tt92.demon.co.uk./bsfam001.htm |
 | | Links from dates of death lead to wills. |  | | This level of the tree is for Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott, the architect, and his sisters and brothers. |  | | The Baillie's family tree goes back to William Wallace and the MacKays directly to the 1st Lord Reay and the previous chiefs of the Clan MacKay. |
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http://www.tt92.demon.co.uk/bsfam001.htm
(157 words)
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| | Period Property UK - Blackwell |
 | | Born in Kent in 1865, Baillie Scott's childhood love of nature became the foundation of his design philosophy. |  | | Blackwell is the only Baillie Scott house open to the public and is his largest and most important surviving work in this country. |  | | The house was granted Grade I listing by English Heritage who described it as "Baillie Scott's finest surviving work in England," and its significance enhanced by the survival of so many elements of the outstandingly important interior. |
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http://www.periodproperty.co.uk/ppom072002.htm
(852 words)
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| | Wiley::Baillie Scott: The Artistic House |
 | | It reveals for the first time the beauty of Baillie Scott’s architectural works and the fascinating breadth of his theory and practice. |  | | This book includes many newly commissioned photographs of Baillie Scott’s houses, as well as original drawing and new research. |  | | He may be considered a third-generation Arts and Crafts architect, who joined the movement after it had become well established and took its ideas to everyman. |
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http://www3.interscience.wiley.com:8100/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1854904329.html
(375 words)
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| | www.bailliescott.com./b_scott1.htm |
 | | Baillie Scott works in Braddan, Isle of Man. |  | | How Baillie Scott built his international career from the Isle of Man. |  | | In search of Baillie Scott on the Isle of Man. |
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http://www.bailliescott.com/b_scott1.htm
(301 words)
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| | RCAHMS : highlights |
 | | The plans for Sandford Cottage can be seen in Baillie Scott's own book entitled 'Houses and Gardens' (1933), a copy of which is also available for viewing in the RCAHMS library. |  | | The Sandford Hotel sits atop Newton Hill in NE Fife looking across the Firth of Tay to Dundee. |  | | The house was originally called Sandford Cottage and was planned on a much smaller scale, as a modest middle class family home in the English Arts and Crafts style. |
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http://www.rcahms.gov.uk/highlightacp2.html
(4869 words)
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| | Scott Coat of Arms |
 | | First found in Roxburghshire where they were seated from early times and their first records appeared on the early census rolls taken by the early Kings of Scotland to determine the rate of taxation of their subjects. |  | | It is hard to say exactly when man first came to the lands that were to become the British Isles, but it can be said with certainty that Paleolithic tribes were flourishing there by 8000 BC. |  | | Some of the first settlers of this name or some of its variants were: Nicholas Scot settled in Virginia in 1606; fourteen years before the "Mayflower"; Elizabeth Scot settled in the Barbados in 1667; Goodwife Scott settled in Virginia in 1623. |
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http://www.houseofnames.com/xq/asp.c/qx/scott-coat-arms.htm
(1249 words)
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| | BBC - Legacies - Architectural Heritage - England - Cumbria - - Article Page 1 |
 | | In his writings, Baillie Scott often stressed his idea of "the soul" of a house - a calm, still, quiet earnestness, rather than the showy pretentiousness found in many modern mansions of the time. |  | | Unfortunately, two fires destroyed most of Baillie Scott's drawings and records, so Blackwell House, the only Baillie Scott building open to the public, is one of the most important surviving examples of his work. |  | | The building is a superb illustration of architecture inspired by the so-called 'Arts and Crafts' movement of the late-19 |
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/heritage/england/cumbria/article_1.shtml
(301 words)
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| | The Architectural Review: Arts and crafts perspectives. (Arts and Crafts ... @ HighBeam Research |
 | | Baillie Scott won, but his entry has been looked down on since because his outsides were relatively conventional. |  | | Darmstadt is a particularly appropriate place for such a reconsideration, for the last Grand Duke of Hesse, Ernst Ludwig, was a great admirer of the English and in 1898, he asked Baillie Scott and C.R.Ashbee to design two rooms in his Neuer Palais. |  | | The Art Lover's House programme was huge - bigger than most of the commissions for private houses then offered in Germany and Britain, and enormous compared to almost anything since. |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1G1:16788109&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf
(874 words)
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| | Blackwell- The Arts and Crafts House, Windermere, Cumbria |
 | | Blackwell is one of England's most important surviving houses from the turn of the 20th century. |  | | Having assimilated the philosophies of John Ruskin and William Morris, Baillie Scott brought a new approach to the design of the house. |  | | Baillie Scott also designed every detail within the house. |
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http://www.visitcumbria.com/amb/blackwel.htm
(323 words)
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| | History Of Peter Scott Knitwear - The Common Riding Connection |
 | | The Hawick Common Riding commemorates events in 1514 when the young men of Hawick defeated an English raiding party at Hornshole, outside Hawick, after nearly every fighting man had been killed in the Battle of Flodden the preceding year. |  | | George was the eldest son of our founder, Peter Scott, and in 1904 he was still a young man, learning the trade and working in the early stages of production, including our yarn store. |  | | The list begins in Peter Scott Knitwear's 9th year of existence when, in 1887, Thomas Scott was Cornet while employed there. |
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http://www.hodgson.iofm.net/pescohistory/commonriding.htm
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| | Obituaries |
 | | He was predeceased by his parents, Mary C. and Walter J. Baillie; his first wife, Gail E. Burke; and a son, Walter Scott Baillie. |  | | Surviving are his wife, Judith A. Baillie; three daughters and a son-in-law, Kathleen and Michael Rossi of Millstone, Dawn Garrett of Wall and Cheri Plamondon of Farmingdale; a sister and brother-in-law, Diane and Robert Rathschmidt of Cream Ridge; four grandchildren; and a niece and nephew, as well as their spouses. |  | | Baillie, 74, of Freehold, died May 4 at CentraState Medical Center, Freehold Township, after a long battle with heart disease. |
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http://examiner.gmnews.com/news/2004/0617/Obituaries
(486 words)
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| | Track Details - Crotchet Web Store |
 | | Ferrier : My work is done from Dream of Gerontius (Elgar). |  | | Baillie : Stript of their green I saw that you were grown so high (Purcell). |  | | Ferrier : I will lay me down in peace. |
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http://www.crotchet.co.uk/cgi-bin/cws/scan/rs=yes/se=APR5544/sp=trackscl?mv_pc=zmusic
(53 words)
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| | BBC - Legacies - Architectural Heritage - England - Cumbria - - Article Page 2 |
 | | In his design, Baillie Scott reinterpreted elements of vernacular architecture to suit his own purposes. |  | | Baillie Scott designed Blackwell so all the main rooms were south-facing, the only exception being the drawing room, which faces both south and west and looks out onto Windermere in the distance. |  | | The hub of the house was the main reception room which Baillie Scott described as a "living hall". |
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/heritage/england/cumbria/article_2.shtml
(309 words)
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| | The Twentieth Century Society |
 | | The Twentieth Century Society has learned that one of the best late houses by the prominent Arts and Crafts architect Hugh Mackay Baillie Scott is in danger of being dwarfed by an outsized new development next door. |  | | Setting of Arts and Crafts masterpiece threatened: Baillie Scott house in Cambridge to be dwarfed |  | | The current owner meticulously repaired later alterations and is now the proud custodian of an important house in its original condition. |
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http://www.c20society.org.uk/docs/press/040819_scott.html
(240 words)
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| | TRAVELLERS' JOYS |
 | | This was largely inspired by the writings of John Ruskin (another Lake District resident) whose idealistic principles for simpler living and traditional ways of working were expressed discreetly yet triumphantly at Blackwell. |  | | Baillie Scott was one of the most important exponents of the Arts and Crafts style. |  | | Having purchased a hill-side site overlooking Lake Windermere with views of the Coniston fells, he commissioned the architect Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott to design his new house built between 1898 and 1900. |
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http://www.artnewsletter.com/travels.htm
(2060 words)
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| | BRUCE BAILLIE / DR. BISH |
 | | "Bruce Baillie's Roslyn Romance (Is It Really True?)" by Sue Anne Estevez, Millenium Film Journal, Nos. |  | | "Baillie's Use of Light: A Reading Of His Notebooks" by Anthony Bannon, Film Culture 67-68-69, 1979. |  | | "Bruce Baillie and the Lyrical Film" by P. Adams Sitney, New Forms in Film: Montreux, August 3/24, 1974, Exhibition catalogue edited by Annette Michelson, Montreux: Corbax, 33-37. |
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http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Theater/1809
(903 words)
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| | Baillie Scott Manxman Chest |
 | | Inspired by the work of The 'Manxman' MH Baillie Scott. |  | | Features include inlays around top and base and inside the top panel of 5,000 year old Bog Oak and Holly. |
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http://freespace.virgin.net/artsand.crafts/stockb4.htm
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| | Wolfsonian |
 | | In 1897, the architect M.H. Baillie Scott was commissioned to design two interiors for Deemster Thomas Kneen's house, Glencrutchery, on the Isle of Man. The fireplace and inglenook from the drawing room are the earliest surviving examples of Baillie Scott's interior design and are among his finest. |  | | By investing everyday objects with the highest design principles, Baillie Scott also strove to integrate art and life. |  | | A 1900 photograph documents the original room, which The Wolfsonian has replicated as closely as possible. |
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http://www.wolfsonian.fiu.edu/exhibitions/past/simple6.html
(251 words)
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| | Scott Baillie Cars - 1220 Tollcross road, Tollcross, Glasgow, G32 8HH, UK |
 | | You can find details on how you can contact us regarding any questions you may have or for further details on any of the vehicles you've seen in our virtual showroom. |  | | Click here to view our virtual showroom, listing the latest cars with images and details. |  | | If you would like more information on our services please feel free to contact us. |
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http://users.autoexposure.co.uk/scottbailliecars
(199 words)
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| | Table of contents for Symbolic interactions |
 | | Scott, Walter, Sir, 1771-1832 -- Political and social views. |  | | Table of contents for Symbolic interactions : social problems and literary interventions in the works of Baillie, Scott, and Landor / Regina Hewitt. |  | | Baillie, Joanna, 1762-1851 -- Political and social views. |
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http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0518/2005024412.html
(141 words)
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| | Books, Research and Information - Arts & Crafts Home |
 | | Having assimilated the philosophies of John Ruskin and William Morris, Baillie Scott brought a new approach to the design of the house. |  | | In keeping with the arts and crafts philosophy, Baillie Scott also designed every detail of the house, oak panelling, stained glass, decorative plasterwork, metalwork and fabric designs. |  | | This house of international importance, standing at the crossroads between Victorian and Modern architecture, was given Grade 1 listing in 1998. |
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http://www.achome.co.uk/places/blackwell.htm
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| | Applause Music Production and Performance Careers - People |
 | | I believe that I finally have a good recipe for success with my band. |  | | Scott followed up with us a few months later.. |  | | Thank you for enlightening me on the path to my dream." Sincerely, Scott Baillie |
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http://www.cnvi.com/applause/people.htm
(932 words)
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| | M H Baillie Scott: arts & crafts architects, historic hotels Scotland |
 | | During Sandford's transformation into a hotel, subtle and tasteful attention to detail ensured the property remained consistent with Baillie Scott's original style, and much of his original work can be appreciated here today. |  | | As the Valentines' business prospered, Sandford was extended and final work accomplished in 1912 after a fire all but destroyed the home. |  | | The favoured effect was romantic and cosy - indeed it was first named Sandford Cottage. |
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http://www.sandfordhotelfife.com/tour/architecture.htm
(168 words)
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| | Opera Directory |
 | | A photograph and profile of this architect, who worked in the Arts and Crafts style, with an illustrated history of Blackwell house in the Lake District (1897-1900), provided by Blackwell. |  | | Comments and photographs about various aspects of the work of Baillie Scott. |  | | Brief biography and Manx work of Mackay Hugh Ballie Scott, from the University of Surrey. |
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http://portal.opera.com/web?cat=366555
(195 words)
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| | NCAW Autumn 05 Jason T. Busch reviews International Arts and Crafts |
 | | The visitor is reminded in the European section of architectural connections to British Arts and Crafts, in particular through comparing the flat-screened videos of Blackwell in Britain and Hvitträsk in Finland; the Blackwell video is presented in the British section and that for Hvitträsk in the European section. |  | | This arrangement also provides a visual database of motifs that would recur throughout the show. |  | | Several native architects, including Eliel Saarinen, built Hvitträsk as a country retreat in a Finnish vernacular stylea form of romantic nationalismbut with reference to the architectural designs of Philip Webb for Red House, the famous home of William Morris (seen in an architectural drawing at the beginning of the show). |
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http://www.19thc-artworldwide.org/autumn_05/reviews/busc.html
(4691 words)
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| | www.bailliescott.com/bscom018.htm |
 | | Surely such an architectural gem by Baillie Scott could place the Island in the forefront of such specialist/heritage attractions. |  | | Not only is this site extremely important as part of our Manx heritage, but it will also, no doubt, prove to be one of great significance, eventually, to the ever widening spectrum of specialist tourist holidays, which are gaining popularity worldwide. |  | | "I was delighted to find your website regarding Baillie Scott's Majestic Hotel in the Isle of Man. |
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http://www.bailliescott.com/bscom018.htm
(448 words)
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| | Mackay, Hugh on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | The Arts: An Arts and Crafts triumph in Cumbria; The reputation of his great rival Charles Rennie Mackintosh has eclipsed that of Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott, but a newly restored Lake District house may change all... |  | | FOOTBALL: MacKay out to make the fans say Hugh who?; Raith v Ross County.(Sport) |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/M/Mackay-H1.asp
(325 words)
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| | Hewn and Hammered |
 | | Their new exterior paint is also very attractive. |  | | Scott Presnell and Stephanie Bloomfield, owners of a 1917 Tacoma WA bungalow, remodeled the kitchen in their historic home, restoring it to its original glory - including a beautiful tile frieze behind the range. |  | | Alex Chiapetta, a Berkeley CA based architectural designer, remodeled this beautiful Craftsman kitchen in Alameda, complete with a gorgeous copper hood, white marble counters and lots of light. |
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http://www.hewnandhammered.com
(4758 words)
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| | Baillie Scott - On the Choice of Simple Furniture |
 | | M.H. The illustrations accompanying the above article are from sketches made by the author. |  | | Baillie Scott - On the Choice of Simple Furniture |
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http://www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook/people/archtcts/bs97.htm
(1971 words)
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| | Toymaker - ZeBOX Artist |
 | | Toymaker's history could fill volumes as it covers years of fun & turmoil, from the halycon days of their punk conception through the triumphant return of the Baillie/Crocker songwriting team. |  | | The band Toymaker was created in 1983, by David Baillie and Scott Crocker, and it has undergone any number of radical changes from then to now. |
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http://zebox.com/poonmaster
(161 words)
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| | Wolfsonian |
 | | On the Continent this concept was called Gesamtkunstwerka total work of art where the building, its furnishings, and its setting form an environmental whole. |  | | The published drawings by Baillie Scott attest to the Arts and Crafts emphasis on design unity. |  | | Although international entries had been encouraged, German national pride was wounded by the competition's result. |
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http://www.wolfsonian.fiu.edu/collections/c1/art6.html
(165 words)
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| | Buy HOUSES AND GARDENS from Aarons books uk |
 | | A reprint of a classic work written nearly 100 years ago, concentrating on Ballie Scott's treatment of the design and layout of house interiors. |  | | Buy HOUSES AND GARDENS from Aarons books uk |
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http://www.aarons-books.co.uk/cat/AMV/houses-and-gardens-1851492348.htm
(43 words)
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