- Inigo Jones
Iñigo Jones (
July 15 ,1573 –June 21 ,1652 ) is regarded as the first significant British architect, and the first to bringRenaissance architecture to England. He also made valuable contributions tostage design .Beyond the fact that he was born in the vicinity of Smithfield in central
London , the son of a Welsh Catholic cloth worker, [His father also bore the unusual name "Iñigo"—perhaps a form of "Ignatius," or a derivative from Spanish. Leapman, p. 14.] and christened at the church ofSt Bartholomew the Less , little is known about Jones' early years. But towards the end of the 16th century, he became one of the first Englishmen to study architecture inItaly , making two visits to that country. The first (c.1598-1603) was possibly funded byRoger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland . The second, from 1613 to 1614, found Iñigo in the company of the Earl of Arundel. He may also have been in Italy in 1606 and was influenced by the ambassadorHenry Wotton and owned a copy ofAndrea Palladio 's works withmarginalia that refer to Wotton. See [http://www.henrywotton.org.uk/ Wotton And His Worlds 2004] by Gerald Curzon. His work became particularly influenced by Palladio. To a lesser extent, he also held that the setting out of buildings should be guided by principles first described by ancient Roman writerVitruvius .Jones' best known buildings are theQueen's House atGreenwich, London (started in 1616, his earliest surviving work) and theBanqueting House at Whitehall (1619) – part of a major modernisation by him of thePalace of Whitehall – which also has a ceiling painted byPeter Paul Rubens .The Banqueting House was one of several projects where Jones worked with his personal assistant and nephew by marriage John Webb.
The other project in which Jones was involved was the design of
Covent Garden . He was commissioned by the Earl of Bedford to build a residential square along the lines of an Italian piazza. The Earl felt obliged to provide a church and he warned Jones that he wanted to economise. He told him to simply erect a "barn" and Jones' oft-quoted response was that his lordship would have "the finest barn in Europe". Little remains of the original church situated to the west of the piazza.As well as his architectural work, Jones did a great deal of work in the field of
stage design . He is credited with introducing movable scenery and theproscenium arch to English theatre. Jones designed costumes, sets, and stage effects for a number ofmasque s byBen Jonson , and the two had famous arguments about whether stage design or literature was more important in theatre. (Jonson ridiculed Jones in a series of his works, written over a span of two decades.) [See: "The Masque of Augurs "; "The Staple of News ;" "A Tale of a Tub;" "Love's Welcome at Bolsover ". Jonson's followerRichard Brome also took a swipe at Jones in "The Weeding of Covent Garden ."]As the Surveyor of Works to King Charles I, Jones worked for Queen
Henrietta Maria on the design of aRoman Catholic chapel atSomerset House (an act that provoked great suspicion from the Protestants) and his career effectively ended with the outbreak of theEnglish Civil War in 1642 and the seizure of the King's houses in 1643. His property was later returned to him (c.1646) but Jones ended his days living inSomerset House and was subsequently buried in the Church ofSt Benet Paul's Wharf , in London. John Denham and thenChristopher Wren followed him as King's Surveyor of Works.It was in his capacity as surveyor that he was asked to conduct some measurements of
Stonehenge . While some of Jones's observations are questionable, and his interpretations and conclusions can only be regarded as fanciful at best, his was the first serious survey.He was an influence on a number of 18th century architects, notably Lord Burlington and
William Kent .
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