Arthur Trystan EdwardsFRIBAFRTPIFRGS (10 November 1884 – 30 January 1973) was a Welsh architectural critic, town planner and amateur cartographer. He was a noted critic of the garden city movement.[1]
At the close of World War I Edwards joined the Ministry of Health and resumed his architectural criticism. The Things which are Seen: a Revaluation of the Visual Arts was published in 1921 and Good and Bad Manners in Architecture, which is considered to be his best work, in 1924.[5]John Betjeman noted that the latter work was "the first book to draw attention after the Great War to Regency architecture and to deplore the destruction of Nash's Regent Street."[6] In 1933 Edwards founded the Hundred New Towns Association, which was ultimately unsuccessful in its aims.[3] In 1953 he published A New Map of the World, in which he proposed his "homalographic" projection.[5]