- William Hardy Wilson
William Hardy Wilson was a noted
Australia narchitect ,artist andauthor .He was born in
Campbelltown, New South Wales in 1881, the second son of William and Jessie Wilson and attendedNewington College (1893-1898). [Newington College Register of Past Students 1863-1998 (Syd, 1999) pp 218 ] The following year he was articled to the firm ofKent & Budden and studied at theSydney Technical College . During this period he took instruction in art fromSydney Long .Upon completion of his articles he went to
England and successfully sat for the intermediate and final examinations of theRoyal Institute of British Architects . InLondon his circle of friends includedGeorge Lambert andArthur Streeton , and he served as secretary of theChelsea Arts Club . Wilson travelled widely inEurope and the United States of America and became interested in the American Colonial style of architecture.After returning to
Sydney he married Margaret McKenzie, and in 1913 he went into partnership withStacey Neave . Wilson exhibited regularly with the Society of Artists, and with other artists he founded the Fine Arts Society. In 1923 his work was hung in the Exhibition of Australian Art atBurlington House , London.Early Australian architecture was the chief influence on his architectural work. Two of his best-known house commissions were built in the suburbs north of Sydney: Eryldene in Gordon (1914); and Purulia in Wahroonga (1916. (See portrait of W. Hardy Wilson at Purulia by Harold Cazneaux [http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn3563889] .) In 1920 he published "The Cow Pasture Road", and Wilson and Neave invited John Berry to join the partnership. The following year Wilson visited
China , and his architectural style started at that time to include Oriental elements.Wilson contributed to "Art in Australia", "The Home", and
The Sydney Morning Herald . In 1924 he published "Old Colonial Architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania". His other published books were "The Dawn of a New Civilization" (1929), "Yin Yang" (1934), "Collapse of Civilization" (1936), "Grecian and Chinese Architecture" (1937), "Eucalyptus" (1941), "Instinct" (1945), "Atomic Civilization" (1949) and "Kurrajong: Sit-Look-See" (1954).In 1927 he left his architectural partnership and lived for three years in London before returning to
Australia to live inMelbourne and then northwesternTasmania . After the death of his first wife he married Elsie MacLean, and from 1940 they lived between a property at Wandin, near Mount Dandenong, and Kew in Melbourne. Wilson died in Richmond on16 December 1955 , survived by his wife and by the son of his first marriage. [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A120598b.htm]
=* William Hardy Wilson made drawings on a variety of subjects including early Australian domestic architecture [http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-an2720698] , colonial homesteads and churches [http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-an2726807] and poultry and other birds [http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-an2793189] .
External links
* [http://www.nla.gov.au/apps/picturescatalogue?action=PCSearch&mode=search&complete1=true&attribute1=Creator&term1=WILSON%2C+HARDY%2C+1881-1955. Collection of images held in the Pictures Collection, National Library of Australia, Canberra]
* [http://nla.gov.au/pict/explore/wilson.html Article about William Hardy Wilson]References
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