‘Coupole Construction’. Showing the transverse section of the exterior and cutaway interior of the cupola of an unidentified building.
Label: ‘William Hume, 14 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
‘Coupole Construction’. Showing the transverse section of the exterior and cutaway interior of the cupola of an unidentified building.
Label: ‘William Hume, 14 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
Plan of [Olympus], consisting of a large circular room with eight semi-circular alcoves. Two opposite alcoves serve as an entrance/exit staircase and as the entrance to a corridor leading to a second circular room.
Label: ‘William Hume, 14 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
Showing the arrangement of various temples around the interior of Olympus.
One copy is labeled: ‘William Hume, 1 Lothian Street , Edinburgh’. Other copy is labeled: ‘William Hume, 14 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
Birds-eye view of [Olympus] similar to T-TYR 8/7/1 [https://www.ica-atom.org/strathclyde/glass-slide-of-pen-sketch-by-pan-olympus;isad]
Birds- eye view of Olympus, as an open temple on top of a table-top mountain.
Label ‘William Hume, 1 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
Showing [Olympus] as a tower and domed temple on top of a hill overlooking the ocean, with a winding road leading down to a seaside building.
Label: ‘William Hume, 14 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
Showing [Olympus] as a tower and domed temple on top of a hill.
Label: ‘William Hume, 14 Lothian Street, Edinburgh’.
Both slides show Olympus.
Showing Olympus and relating to idealism (vital Olympus), religion, synthesis, synergy, synthesis science (vital), ideal city and arts (paleotechnic).
Showing Olympus and an industrial town, and relating to theological Olympus, war, individual progress, politics, science and industry (paleotechnic).
Both slides show Olympus.
Showing plan of a temple to various gods and goddesses, with their contemporary inversions (eg drudge, harlot, hag, hooligan and doltard).
Showing a [sculpture or architectural detail] of a woman, possibly a goddess , playing a harp.
Endorsed: ‘Definé par Bartolini. Gravé par Pierre Fontana de Rome’.
[Possibly Pierre Fontaine (1763-1853), French architect and decorator, who lived and worked in Rome at various points throughout his career].