Egyptian Revival is an architectural style that uses the motifs and imagery of ancient Egypt.
It featured a nude statue of the general and an obelisk, both set upon an Egyptian Revival base.
The Egyptian Revival decorative arts style was present in furniture and other household objects, as well as in architecture.
For John "Mad" Martin, an English painter working in the early 1800's, the Egyptian Revival was another opportunity to exercise his apocalyptic vision.
The letter left no doubt that the design for the church, the most important example of Egyptian Revival in the United States, was Lafever's.
The work crowned his reputation both as an archaeologist and as an artist, and sparked the Egyptian Revival in architecture and decorative arts.
Western Architecture was also affected by Egyptomania in what is known as the Egyptian Revival.
This floor is in the Egyptian Revival and ancient Hebraic architectural styles.
A photo can be seen in The Egyptian Revival by Richard G. Carrot.
It includes Egyptian Revival, Gothic and other architecture.