- John Soane
Sir John Soane (
10 September 1753 –20 January 1837 ) was an Englisharchitect who specialised in the Neo-Classical style. His architectural works are distinguished by their clean lines, massing of simple form, decisive detailing, careful proportions and skilful use of light sources. The influence of his work, coming at the end of the Georgian era, was swamped by the revival styles of the 19th century. It was not until the late 19th century that the influence of Sir John's architecture was widely felt. His best-known work was theBank of England , a building which had widespread effect on commercial architecture.Biography
Soane was born in
Goring-on-Thames [ [http://www.greatbuildings.com/architects/Sir_John_Soane.html Great Buildings] ] and educated in nearby Reading, the son of a bricklayer. His name was initially "Swan" which was first changed to "Soan" and later to "Soane". [ [http://www.berkshirehistory.com/bios/jsoane.html Berkshire History] ] Soane trained as an architect, first underGeorge Dance the Younger , and then Henry Holland, while also studying at theRoyal Academy schools, which he entered in 1771. During his studies at the Royal Academy, he won the Academy's silver medal (1772), gold medal (1776) and finally a travelling scholarship in 1777, which he spent on developing his style inItaly . [ [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Sir_John_Soane Britannica 1911 encyclopedia] ]where he established a small architectural practice.
In 1788, he succeeded Sir Robert Taylor as architect and surveyor to the
Bank of England , the exterior of the Bank being his most famous work. SirHerbert Baker 's rebuilding of the Bank, demolishing most of Soane's earlier building was described byNikolaus Pevsner as "the greatest architectural crime, in theCity of London , of the twentieth century". The Bank job, and especially the personal contacts arising from it, increased the success of Soane's practice, and he became AssociateRoyal Academician (ARA) in 1795, then full Royal Academician (RA) in 1802. He was made Professor of Architecture at the Royal Academy in 1806, [ [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/ARsoane.htm Spartacus schoolnet] ] a post which he held until his death. Then, in 1814, he was appointed to theMetropolitan Board of Works , where he remained until his retirement in 1832. In 1831, Soane received aknighthood .Soane was commissioned by the Bank of Ireland to design a new headquarters for the triangular site on Westmoreland Street now occupied by the Westin Hotel. However, when the Irish Parliament was abolished in 1800, the Bank abandoned the project and instead bought the former Parliament Buildings.
During his time in London, Soane ran a lucrative architectural practice, remodelling and designing country homes for the
landed gentry . Among Soane's most notable works are the dining rooms of both numbers 10 and11 Downing Street for the Prime Minister and Chancellor of Britain, theDulwich Picture Gallery which is the archetype for most modern art galleries, and his country home atPitzhanger Manor inEaling .Soane died, a widower and estranged from his surviving son (whom he felt had betrayed him, contributing to his own mother's death), in
London in 1837. He is buried in a vault of his own design in the churchyard ofSt Pancras Old Church . The design of the vault was a direct influence onGiles Gilbert Scott 's design for thered telephone box .ir John Soane's Museum
In 1792, Soane bought a house at 12
Lincoln's Inn Fields ,London . He used the house as his home and library, but also entertained potential clients in the drawing room. It is nowSir John Soane's Museum and is open to the public.Between 1794 and 1824, Soane remodelled and extended the house into two neighbouring properties — partly to experiment with architectural ideas, and partly to house his growing collection of
antiquities and architectural salvage. As his practice prospered, Soane was able to collect objects worthy of theBritish Museum , including the sarcophagus ofSeti I , Roman bronzes fromPompeii , severalCanaletto 's and a collection of paintings by Hogarth. In 1833, he obtained anAct of Parliament to bequeath the house and collection to the British Nation to be made into a museum of architecture, now the Sir John Soane's Museum.elected list of architectural works
*
Aynhoe Park , Aynhoe,Banbury ,Oxfordshire
*Bank of England
*Chillington Hall
* Cricket House,Somerset
*Dulwich Picture Gallery
*Holy Trinity Church Marylebone
*Moggerhanger House ,Bedfordshire
*Pell Wall Hall ,Market Drayton ,Shropshire
*Piercefield House
*Pitzhanger Manor
* The Royal Hospital, Chelsea
*St. John's Church, Bethnal Green
*St. Peter's Church, Walworth
* Soane's house inLincoln's Inn Fields , now a museum
*South Hill Park
*Tyringham Hall , Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire
*Wimpole Hall , Arrington, Royston, Cambridgeshire
*Wokefield Park
*Wotton House , BuckinghamshireReferences
External links
* [http://soane.org.uk/ Catalogue of library and museum]
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