John Wood, the Elder: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|English architect (1704–1754)}} |
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{{about|the 18th century English architect|other people with similar names|John Wood (disambiguation)}} |
{{about|the 18th century English architect|other people with similar names|John Wood (disambiguation)}} |
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{{Use British English|date=August 2011}} |
{{Use British English|date=August 2011}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date= |
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2021}} |
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{{Infobox architect |
{{Infobox architect |
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| name = John Wood |
| name = John Wood |
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| birth_date = 1704 |
| birth_date = 1704 |
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| birth_place = [[Twerton]], England |
| birth_place = [[Twerton]], England |
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| death_date = {{Death date|1754|05|23|df=yes}} (Aged |
| death_date = {{Death date|1754|05|23|df=yes}} (Aged 49–50) |
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| death_place = [[Bath, Somerset|Bath]], England |
| death_place = [[Bath, Somerset|Bath]], England |
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| nationality = English |
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| alma_mater = |
| alma_mater = |
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| influences = |
| influences = |
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| awards = |
| awards = |
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}} |
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'''John Wood |
'''John Wood, the Elder''' (1704 – 23 May 1754) was an English [[architect]], working mainly in [[Bath, Somerset|Bath]]. |
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In 1740 he surveyed [[Stonehenge]] and the [[Stanton Drew stone circles]]. He later wrote extensively about [[Bladud]] and [[Neo-Druidism]]. Because of some of his designs he is also thought to have been involved in the early years of [[Freemasonry]]. |
In 1740 he surveyed [[Stonehenge]] and the [[Stanton Drew stone circles]]. He later wrote extensively about [[Bladud]] and [[Neo-Druidism]]. Because of some of his designs he is also thought to have been involved in the early years of [[Freemasonry]]. |
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His notable work in Bath included: |
His notable work in Bath included: [[St John's Hospital, Bath|St John's Hospital]], [[Queen Square (Bath)|Queen Square]], [[Prior Park]], [[Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases|The Royal Mineral Water Hospital]], the [[North Parade, Bath|North]] and [[South Parade, Bath|South Parades]] and [[The Circus (Bath)|The Circus]]. Wood also designed important buildings outside Bath, including the reconstruction of [[Llandaff Cathedral]], [[Buckland House]], [[The Exchange, Bristol]], and [[Liverpool Town Hall]]. He has been described by [[Nikolaus Pevsner]] as "one of the outstanding architects of the day".<ref name=pev286>{{Harvnb|Pollard|Pevsner|2006|p=286.}}</ref> |
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==Early life== |
==Early life== |
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During his teenage years and early twenties, Wood worked for Robert Benson, the first [[Baron Bingley]] at his estate, [[Bramham Park]], [[Yorkshire]]. He then became involved in speculative builds on the [[Cavendish family|Cavendish estate]] in London. |
During his teenage years and early twenties, Wood worked for Robert Benson, the first [[Baron Bingley]] at his estate, [[Bramham Park]], [[Yorkshire]]. He then became involved in speculative builds on the [[Cavendish family|Cavendish estate]] in London. |
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<ref name="Mowl & Earnshaw 1988 66">{{cite book|last=Mowl & Earnshaw|first=Tim & Brian|title=John Wood: Architect of Obsession|year=1988|publisher=Millstream Books|location=Bath|isbn=094897513X|pages=66}}</ref> |
<ref name="Mowl & Earnshaw 1988 66">{{cite book|last=Mowl & Earnshaw|first=Tim & Brian|title=John Wood: Architect of Obsession|year=1988|publisher=Millstream Books|location=Bath|isbn=094897513X|pages=66}}</ref><ref name=mowl>{{Harvnb|Mowl|Earnshaw|1988|pages=13–14}}</ref><ref name=bathmuseumbiog>{{cite web|title=John Wood the Elder |url=http://www.bathmuseum.co.uk/biography.htm |work=Bath Museum |publisher=Bath Preservation Trust |access-date=23 July 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071113094712/http://www.bathmuseum.co.uk/biography.htm |archive-date=13 November 2007 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Mowl & Earnshaw 1988 66"/><ref name=mowl>{{Harvnb|Mowl|Earnshaw|1988|pages=13–14}}</ref><ref name=bathmuseumbiog>{{cite web|title=John Wood the Elder |url=http://www.bathmuseum.co.uk/biography.htm |work=Bath Museum |publisher=Bath Preservation Trust |accessdate=23 July 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071113094712/http://www.bathmuseum.co.uk/biography.htm |archivedate=13 November 2007 }}</ref> |
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==Style and vision== |
==Style and vision== |
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Wood set out to restore Bath to what he believed was its former ancient glory as one of the most important and significant cities in [[England]]. In 1725 he developed an ambitious plan for his home town, which due to opposition he developed outside the existing city walls.<ref>{{cite book|last=Wood|first=John|title=Essay Towards a Description of Bath|year=1765|publisher=Kingsmead Reprints|location=Bath}}</ref> Wood created a distinctive image for the city, one that has greatly contributed to Bath's continuing popularity.<ref name=Frost/> |
Wood set out to restore Bath to what he believed was its former ancient glory as one of the most important and significant cities in [[England]]. In 1725 he developed an ambitious plan for his home town, which due to opposition he developed outside the existing city walls.<ref>{{cite book|last=Wood|first=John|title=Essay Towards a Description of Bath|year=1765|publisher=Kingsmead Reprints|location=Bath}}</ref> Wood created a distinctive image for the city, one that has greatly contributed to Bath's continuing popularity.<ref name=Frost/> |
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Wood's grand plans for Bath were consistently hampered by the |
Wood's grand plans for Bath were consistently hampered by the corporation (council), churchmen, landowners and moneymen. Instead he approached [[Robert Gay (MP)|Robert Gay]], a barber surgeon from London, and the owner of the Barton Farm estate in the Manor of [[Walcot, Bath|Walcot]], outside the city walls.<ref name="SpenceHS"/> On these fields Wood established Bath's architectural style, the basic principles of which were copied by all those architects who came after him. Wood created one of the greatest attractions in the world, recognised by [[UNESCO World Heritage Site|UNESCO]] for embodying a number of outstanding universal values — including the deliberate creation of a beautiful and unified city.<ref name=SpenceHS>{{cite book|last=Spence|first=Cathryn|title=Water, History & Style: Bath World Heritage Site|year=2012|publisher=The History Press|location=Stroud|isbn=9780752488141}}</ref> |
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===Speculative Building=== |
===Speculative Building=== |
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==Bath architecture== |
==Bath architecture== |
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Wood is known for designing many of the streets and buildings of Bath, such as [[St John's Hospital, Bath|St John's Hospital]],<ref name="English Heritage">{{cite web |author= |
Wood is known for designing many of the streets and buildings of Bath, such as [[St John's Hospital, Bath|St John's Hospital]],<ref name="English Heritage">{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=442408 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121017222351/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=442408 |url-status=dead |archive-date=17 October 2012 |title=St John's Hospital (including Chapel Court House) (442408) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref> (1727–28), [[Queen Square (Bath)|Queen Square]] (1728–36), [[Prior Park]] (1734–41),<ref name="imagesofengland.org.uk">{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443306 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080929093503/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/details/default.aspx?id=443306 |url-status=dead |archive-date=29 September 2008 |title=Prior Park (Now Prior Park College) (443306) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}} Hart, Vaughan (1989). ‘One View of a Town. Prior Park and the City of Bath’, ''RES: Journal of Anthropology and Aesthetics'', pp.140–157.</ref> [[Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases|The Royal Mineral Water Hospital]] (1738–42) the [[North Parade, Bath|North]] (1740) and [[South Parade, Bath|South Parades]] (1743–48), [[The Circus (Bath)|The Circus]] (1754–68),<ref>{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=442451 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121017222701/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=442451 |url-status=dead |archive-date=17 October 2012 |title=The Circus (442451) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref> and other notable houses, many of which are [[Grade I listed buildings in Bath and North East Somerset|Grade I listed buildings]]. |
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In 1716 the architect William Killigrew was commissioned to rebuild the St John's Hospital, which had been founded around 1180, by Bishop [[Reginald Fitz Jocelin]] making it among the oldest [[almshouse]]s in England.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.buildinghistory.org/jean/spiritofcare.shtml|title=The eight-hundred-year story of St John's Hospital, Bath |work=Spirit of Care|publisher=Jean Manco| |
In 1716 the architect William Killigrew was commissioned to rebuild the St John's Hospital, which had been founded around 1180, by Bishop [[Reginald Fitz Jocelin]] making it among the oldest [[almshouse]]s in England.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.buildinghistory.org/jean/spiritofcare.shtml|title=The eight-hundred-year story of St John's Hospital, Bath |work=Spirit of Care|publisher=Jean Manco|access-date=25 July 2009}}</ref> Construction continued after 1727 with John Wood, the Elder undertaking the building, as his first work in Bath, when he was aged 23.<ref name="English Heritage"/> |
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[[Ralph Allen's Town House, Bath|Ralph Allen's Town House]] was commissioned by [[Ralph Allen]] who commenced building it in or shortly after 1727. Opinion is divided as to whether John Wood the Elder designed the "Town House",<ref>{{cite web |author= |
[[Ralph Allen's Town House, Bath|Ralph Allen's Town House]] was commissioned by [[Ralph Allen]] who commenced building it in or shortly after 1727. Opinion is divided as to whether John Wood the Elder designed the "Town House",<ref>{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443802 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121018033819/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443802 |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 October 2012 |title=Ralph Allen's House, Terrace Walk, Bath (443802) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://idox.bathnes.gov.uk/WAM/doc/BackGround%20Papers-237538.pdf?extension=.pdf&id=237538&location=VOLUME2&contentType=application/pdf&pageCount=1| title=Appendix. Part 2 | work=Listed Building Application, Friends Meeting House | publisher=Bath and North East Somerset | access-date=26 April 2011 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722033751/http://idox.bathnes.gov.uk/WAM/doc/BackGround%20Papers-237538.pdf?extension=.pdf&id=237538&location=VOLUME2&contentType=application%2Fpdf&pageCount=1 | archive-date=22 July 2011 | url-status=dead }}</ref> however the ostentatious decoration is not a style he uses elsewhere in Bath. Wood, in his "Essay towards the future of Bath", says — while Mr.Allen was making the Addition to the North Part of his House in Lilliput Alley he new fronted and raised the old Building a full Story higher; it consists of a Basement Story sustaining a double Story under the Crowning; and this is surmounted by an Attick, which created a sixth Rate House, and a Sample for the greatest Magnificence that was ever proposed by me for our City Houses.<ref name="woodessay">{{Harvnb|Wood|1749|p=245}}</ref> |
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[[File:Queen Square Bath north side.jpg|thumb|North side, [[Queen Square (Bath)|Queen Square]] ]] |
[[File:Queen Square Bath north side.jpg|thumb|North side, [[Queen Square (Bath)|Queen Square]] ]] |
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[[Queen Square (Bath)|Queen Square]] was Wood's first speculative development. Wood lived in a house on the square.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ukattraction.com/west-country/queens-square.htm |title=Queen Square | |
[[Queen Square (Bath)|Queen Square]] was Wood's first speculative development. Wood lived in a house on the square.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ukattraction.com/west-country/queens-square.htm |title=Queen Square |access-date=10 January 2008 |work=UK attractions |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080419022417/http://www.ukattraction.com/west-country/queens-square.htm |archive-date=19 April 2008 }}</ref> Numbers 21–27 make up the north side.<ref>{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443387 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121018003651/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443387 |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 October 2012 |title=Queen Square (north side) (443387) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref> Which was described by [[Nikolaus Pevsner]] as "one of the finest [[Palladian architecture|Palladian]] compositions in England before 1730".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.thebath.net/old/environment/queensquare/index.html |title=Queen Square |access-date=10 January 2008 |work=Bath Net |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070928181708/http://www.thebath.net/old/environment/queensquare/index.html <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archive-date = 28 September 2007}}</ref> The west side (numbers 14 – 18 and 18A, 19 & 20) was designed by [[John Pinch the younger|John Pinch]] in 1830 and differs from Wood's original design as the central block is in Neo-Grecian style.<ref>{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443386 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121018003514/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443386 |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 October 2012 |title=Queen Square (west side) (443386) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref> 16–18 is now occupied by the [[Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution]]. The south side (numbers 5–13) which was originally left open is now occupied by a hotel.<ref>{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443385 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121018003728/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443385 |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 October 2012 |title=Queen Square (south side) (443385) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref> |
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[[File:PriorParkCollege.JPG|thumb|left|Prior Park, the Palladian mansion built in 1742 for Ralph Allen]] |
[[File:PriorParkCollege.JPG|thumb|left|Prior Park, the Palladian mansion built in 1742 for Ralph Allen]] |
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In 1742, Wood was commissioned to build a home for the mayor of Bath [[Ralph Allen]], on a hill overlooking the city of Bath. This building is Grade I listed and has housed [[Prior Park College]] since 1830.<ref name="imagesofengland.org.uk"/> |
In 1742, Wood was commissioned to build a home for the mayor of Bath [[Ralph Allen]], on a hill overlooking the city of Bath. This building is Grade I listed and has housed [[Prior Park College]] since 1830.<ref name="imagesofengland.org.uk"/> |
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The building for the [[Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases]] was designed by Wood and built with [[Bath Stone]] donated by [[Ralph Allen]]. It was later enlarged, firstly in 1793 by the addition of an attic storey and later in 1860 by a second building erected on the west side of the earlier edifice. It is a Grade II [[listed building]].<ref>{{cite web |author= |
The building for the [[Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases]] was designed by Wood and built with [[Bath Stone]] donated by [[Ralph Allen]]. It was later enlarged, firstly in 1793 by the addition of an attic storey and later in 1860 by a second building erected on the west side of the earlier edifice. It is a Grade II [[listed building]].<ref>{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=443857 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071117184203/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/details/default.aspx?id=443857 |url-status=dead |archive-date=17 November 2007 |title=Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases (443857) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref> There is a fine [[pediment]], in Bath stone, on 1860 building depicting the [[parable of the Good Samaritan]]. |
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North Parade was part of a wider scheme to build a Royal Forum, including [[South Parade, Bath|South Parade]], [[Pierrepont Street, Bath|Pierrepont]] and [[Duke Street, Bath|Duke Street]]s, similar to [[Queen Square (Bath)|Queen Square]], which was never completed. Wood designed the [[facade]], of Bath Stone, after which a variety of builders completed the work with different interiors and rear elevations.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bathnes.gov.uk/SiteCollectionDocuments/Environment%20and%20Planning/Low%20res%20World%20Site%20Plan.pdf |title=Bath World Heritage Site Management Plan |publisher=Bath and North East Somerset Council | |
North Parade was part of a wider scheme to build a Royal Forum, including [[South Parade, Bath|South Parade]], [[Pierrepont Street, Bath|Pierrepont]] and [[Duke Street, Bath|Duke Street]]s, similar to [[Queen Square (Bath)|Queen Square]], which was never completed. Wood designed the [[facade]], of Bath Stone, after which a variety of builders completed the work with different interiors and rear elevations.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bathnes.gov.uk/SiteCollectionDocuments/Environment%20and%20Planning/Low%20res%20World%20Site%20Plan.pdf |title=Bath World Heritage Site Management Plan |publisher=Bath and North East Somerset Council |access-date=11 November 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120312080503/http://www.bathnes.gov.uk/SiteCollectionDocuments/Environment%20and%20Planning/Low%20res%20World%20Site%20Plan.pdf |archive-date=12 March 2012 }}</ref> |
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[[Wood Street, Bath|Wood Street]] was built in 1778 |
[[Wood Street, Bath|Wood Street]] was built in 1778 and has been designated as a Grade I [[listed building]].<ref>{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=444096 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121018034212/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=444096 |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 October 2012 |title=Numbers 1 to 7 (444096) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref> The street was designed by John Wood, the Elder and built by [[Thomas Baldwin (architect)|Thomas Baldwin]] in the same style as the adjacent Queen Square. |
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[[File:the.circus.bath.arp.jpg|thumb|right|[[The Circus (Bath)|The Circus]]]] |
[[File:the.circus.bath.arp.jpg|thumb|right|[[The Circus (Bath)|The Circus]]]] |
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His final masterpiece was the [[The Circus (Bath)|Circus]],<ref>{{Harvnb|Gadd|1988|pp=47–51.}}</ref> built on Barton Fields outside the old city walls of Bath, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, [[John Wood, the Younger]] to complete the scheme to his father's design. Wood's inspiration was the Roman [[Colosseum]], but whereas the [[Colosseum]] was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. Three classical |
His final masterpiece was the [[The Circus (Bath)|Circus]],<ref>{{Harvnb|Gadd|1988|pp=47–51.}}</ref> built on Barton Fields outside the old city walls of Bath, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, [[John Wood, the Younger]] to complete the scheme to his father's design. Wood's inspiration was the Roman [[Colosseum]], but whereas the [[Colosseum]] was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. Three classical [[Classical order|Orders]], (Greek [[Doric order|Doric]], [[Composite order|Roman/Composite]] and [[Corinthian order|Corinthian]]) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The [[frieze]] of the [[Doric order|Doric]] [[entablature]] is decorated with alternating [[triglyph]]s and 525 pictorial emblems, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and [[Freemasonry#Ritual, symbolism, and morality|masonic symbols]]. The [[parapet]] is adorned with stone acorn [[finial]]s. He demonstrated how a row of town houses could be dignified, almost palatial. The uses of uniform facades and rhythmic proportions in conjunction with classical principles of unerring symmetry were followed throughout the city. |
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==Architecture outside Bath== |
==Architecture outside Bath== |
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Wood's work on the rebuilding of Llandaff Cathedral gained the nicknamed of the "Italian Temple". It was used for a hundred years but never completed and only a few stones remain.<ref name=mowl213/> |
Wood's work on the rebuilding of Llandaff Cathedral gained the nicknamed of the "Italian Temple". It was used for a hundred years but never completed and only a few stones remain.<ref name=mowl213/> |
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The Exchange in Bristol was built in 1741–43 by Wood, with carvings by [[Thomas Paty]]. Wood was also the architect of the Liverpool Exchange, which was completed in 1754 and gutted by fire in 1795. The London Exchange of Wood's day was also destroyed by fire in 1838. Bristol's Exchange is therefore unique, the only surviving 18th-century exchange building in England. When finished in 1743 the Exchange, as planned, had "the outward appearance of one grand structure," and the much-admired exterior remains today largely as built. The front of the building has [[Corinthian order|Corinthian columns]] in the centre and [[pilaster]]s to the sides. A central semicircular-arched doorway has cast-iron lion-head knockers. A [[frieze]] with human and animal heads symbolises trade, and a royal [[coat of arms]] is displayed in the [[Tympanum (architecture)|tympanum]]. The rear of the building is symmetrical with pedimented windows and semicircular ground-floor arches.<ref>{{NHLE |num=1298770 |desc=The Exchange | |
The Exchange in Bristol was built in 1741–43 by Wood, with carvings by [[Thomas Paty]]. Wood was also the architect of the Liverpool Exchange, which was completed in 1754 and gutted by fire in 1795. The London Exchange of Wood's day was also destroyed by fire in 1838. Bristol's Exchange is therefore unique, the only surviving 18th-century exchange building in England. When finished in 1743 the Exchange, as planned, had "the outward appearance of one grand structure," and the much-admired exterior remains today largely as built. The front of the building has [[Corinthian order|Corinthian columns]] in the centre and [[pilaster]]s to the sides. A central semicircular-arched doorway has cast-iron lion-head knockers. A [[frieze]] with human and animal heads symbolises trade, and a royal [[coat of arms]] is displayed in the [[Tympanum (architecture)|tympanum]]. The rear of the building is symmetrical with pedimented windows and semicircular ground-floor arches.<ref>{{NHLE |num=1298770 |desc=The Exchange |access-date=21 August 2006}}</ref> |
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[[File:Liverpool Town Hall.JPG|thumb|[[Liverpool Town Hall]] (1749–54), with later dome and portico]] |
[[File:Liverpool Town Hall.JPG|thumb|[[Liverpool Town Hall]] (1749–54), with later dome and portico]] |
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[[Liverpool Town Hall]] |
[[Liverpool Town Hall]] was built between 1749 and 1754 to a design by Wood replacing an earlier town hall nearby. An extension to the north designed by [[James Wyatt]] was added in 1785. The ground floor acted as the exchange, and a council room and other offices were on the upper floor.<ref name=pev286/> The ground floor had a central [[courtyard]] surrounded by [[Doric order|Doric]] [[colonnade]]s but it was "dark and confined, and the merchants preferred to transact business in the street outside".<ref name=pev287>{{Harvnb|Pollard|Pevsner|2006|p=287.}}</ref> Following a fire in 1795 the hall was largely rebuilt and the portico and dome were added by [[James Wyatt]] who also redesigned the interiors. |
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[[Buckland House]] is a large Georgian [[stately home]] and the [[manor house]] of [[Buckland, Oxfordshire|Buckland]] in [[Oxfordshire]] built in 1757. Sir Robert [[Throckmorton Baronets|Throckmorton]], the fourth baronet of Coughton,<ref name="parksandgardens.ac.uk" /> who commissioned Wood to design the new Buckland House<ref name="The Dovecote: History">{{cite web |title=The Dovecote: ''History'' |url=http://the-dovecote.co.uk/history/history.html | |
[[Buckland House]] is a large Georgian [[stately home]] and the [[manor house]] of [[Buckland, Oxfordshire|Buckland]] in [[Oxfordshire]] built in 1757. Sir Robert [[Throckmorton Baronets|Throckmorton]], the fourth baronet of Coughton,<ref name="parksandgardens.ac.uk" /> who commissioned Wood to design the new Buckland House<ref name="The Dovecote: History">{{cite web |title=The Dovecote: ''History'' |url=http://the-dovecote.co.uk/history/history.html |access-date=18 September 2008}}</ref> as a shooting lodge and weekend retreat.<ref name="parksandgardens.ac.uk">{{cite web|title=Parks & Gardens UK: ''Buckland House, Oxfordshire/Summary'' |url=http://www.parksandgardens.ac.uk/component/option,com_parksandgardens/task,site/id,615/Itemid,292/ |access-date=20 September 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101231020357/http://www.parksandgardens.ac.uk/component/option%2Ccom_parksandgardens/task%2Csite/id%2C615/Itemid%2C292/ |archive-date=31 December 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=BBC: ''Legacies/Architectural Heritage/England/Oxford/Life Before The Freezer'' |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/heritage/england/oxford/article_1.shtml |access-date=20 September 2008}}</ref> [[John Wood, the Younger]] substantially revised the plan and added the distinctive octagonal pavilions to the sides of the house. The final house is illustrated in the 1767 volume of ''[[Vitruvius Britannicus]]''.<ref name="The Dovecote: History" /> |
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==Stonehenge and Stanton Drew surveys== |
==Stonehenge and Stanton Drew surveys== |
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[[File:Plan-of-stones-wood-17401.jpg|thumb|Part of Wood's plan of [[Stonehenge]]]] |
[[File:Plan-of-stones-wood-17401.jpg|thumb|Part of Wood's plan of [[Stonehenge]]]] |
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Wood also left us the most important plan of [[Stonehenge]] ever made; his survey, carried out in 1740 and published in his ''Choir Gaure, Vulgarly Called Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain'' (1747),<ref>[https://books.google.com/books/about/Choir_Gaure_Vulgarly_Called_Stonehenge_o.html?id=pUgGAAAAQAAJ Google Books]</ref> was annotated with hundreds of measurements, which he resolved on the ground to one half, sometimes even one quarter, of an inch.<ref name=woodchoirgaure>{{Harvnb|Wood|1747}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=John Wood|url=http://www.solvingstonehenge.co.uk/John_Wood.html|publisher=Solving Stonehenge| |
Wood also left us the most important plan of [[Stonehenge]] ever made; his survey, carried out in 1740 and published in his ''Choir Gaure, Vulgarly Called Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain'' (1747),<ref>[https://books.google.com/books/about/Choir_Gaure_Vulgarly_Called_Stonehenge_o.html?id=pUgGAAAAQAAJ Google Books]</ref> was annotated with hundreds of measurements, which he resolved on the ground to one half, sometimes even one quarter, of an inch.<ref name=woodchoirgaure>{{Harvnb|Wood|1747}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=John Wood|url=http://www.solvingstonehenge.co.uk/John_Wood.html|publisher=Solving Stonehenge|access-date=25 July 2012}}</ref> This work has been largely overlooked, partly due to criticisms made by the antiquarian [[William Stukeley]].<ref name=elliot23-26>{{Harvnb|Elliot|2004|pp=23–26.}}</ref> Wood's interpretation of the monument as a place of pagan ritual was vehemently attacked by Stukeley who saw the druids not as pagans, but as biblical patriarchs.<ref>Stukeley, William, 1740, ''Stonehenge A Temple Restor'd to the British Druids''. London</ref> Stukely also failed to see the significance of recording the stones in such detail. However, using Wood's original dimensions it has been possible to re-draw his work on a computer and compare the record with the modern plan of Stonehenge. His survey has immense archaeological value, for he recorded the stones fifty years before the collapse of the western [[trilithon]] (which fell in 1797 and was not restored until 1958).<ref name=johnson>{{Harvnb|Johnson|2008|pp=66–71}}</ref> |
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In the same year Wood surveyed and mapped the [[Stanton Drew stone circles]], noting the different stones used and suggesting the layout was based on the Pythagorean planetary system.<ref>{{Harvnb|Elliot|2004|pp=39–40}}</ref> |
In the same year Wood surveyed and mapped the [[Stanton Drew stone circles]], noting the different stones used and suggesting the layout was based on the Pythagorean planetary system.<ref>{{Harvnb|Elliot|2004|pp=39–40}}</ref> |
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Many of the buildings he designed are littered with [[icon]]s and [[symbol]]s associated with [[Freemasonry]], leading many people who have studied his work to believe that he was a member of the organisation, even though there is no documentary proof. Wood wrote extensively about sacred geometry, and argued that the myths of the supposed founder of Bath, [[Bladud|King Bladud]], were based on truth. He claimed that ancient British [[stone circle]]s were the remains of once more elaborate buildings designed by Bladud. |
Many of the buildings he designed are littered with [[icon]]s and [[symbol]]s associated with [[Freemasonry]], leading many people who have studied his work to believe that he was a member of the organisation, even though there is no documentary proof. Wood wrote extensively about sacred geometry, and argued that the myths of the supposed founder of Bath, [[Bladud|King Bladud]], were based on truth. He claimed that ancient British [[stone circle]]s were the remains of once more elaborate buildings designed by Bladud. |
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It has been suggested that Wood (and his son, also [[John Wood, the Younger|John)]] were connected to Freemasonry either via one of their building partnerships and/or via symbolism in their architecture. In his Masonic lecture and article, [[Stephen Ben Cox]] tentatively suggests an image for this as the square (Queen's Square), the circle (The Circus) and the crescent (The Royal Crescent): standing for Earth, Sun and Moon, and following the masonic path of the sun in the Lodge from east (the Master chair) to south (the Junior Warden) and exiting in the west (the Senior Warden) as a symbol of man's spiritual progress in life from the rough to the smooth ashlar.<ref>Cox, Stephen B. ''The Path of the Sun |
It has been suggested that Wood (and his son, also [[John Wood, the Younger|John)]] were connected to Freemasonry either via one of their building partnerships and/or via symbolism in their architecture. In his Masonic lecture and article, [[Stephen Ben Cox]] tentatively suggests an image for this as the square (Queen's Square), the circle (The Circus) and the crescent (The Royal Crescent): standing for Earth, Sun and Moon, and following the masonic path of the sun in the Lodge from east (the Master chair) to south (the Junior Warden) and exiting in the west (the Senior Warden) as a symbol of man's spiritual progress in life from the rough to the smooth ashlar.<ref>Cox, Stephen B. ''The Path of the Sun in the Masons Lodge''</ref> |
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When viewed from the air, the Circus, along with Queens Square and the adjoining [[Gay Street, Bath|Gay Street]], form a key shape, which is a masonic symbol similar to those that adorn many of Wood's buildings.<ref>{{cite web|last=Thomas|first=Ceri|title=The Royal Crescent in Bath|url=http://www.picturesofengland.com/England/Somerset/Bath/article/1044|publisher=Pictures of England| |
When viewed from the air, the Circus, along with Queens Square and the adjoining [[Gay Street, Bath|Gay Street]], form a key shape, which is a masonic symbol similar to those that adorn many of Wood's buildings.<ref>{{cite web|last=Thomas|first=Ceri|title=The Royal Crescent in Bath|url=http://www.picturesofengland.com/England/Somerset/Bath/article/1044|publisher=Pictures of England|access-date=10 June 2012}}</ref> Cox notes that there is no direct evidence of deliberate Masonic expression in the architecture (although there are plenty of carved signs and symbols which are important to Freemasonry). He goes on however to say that it is interesting to note that Queen Square is lower down the hill whilst The Circus overlooks it at the top of the hill, whilst to the west The Crescent faces out across the open space of the park sloping away from it. |
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Media proprietor Felix Farley (c. |
Media proprietor Felix Farley (c. 1708–1753) published Wood's ''The Origin of Building: Or, The Plagiarism of the Heathens Detected, In Five Books''.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/name/felix-farley |title = Felix Farley | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts}}</ref> |
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==Bladud and the druids== |
==Bladud and the druids== |
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In many of Woods writings, and particularly ''The Essay towards a description of Bath'', he describes [[Bladud]], a legendary king of the [[Britons (historical)|Britons]] for whose existence there is no historical evidence, as the founder of Bath. Wood repeats and embellishes earlier stories that Bladud founded the city because while he was in Athens he contracted [[leprosy]], and when he returned home he was imprisoned as a result, but escaped and went far off to go into hiding. He found employment as a swineherd at [[Swainswick]], about two miles from the later site of [[Bath, Somerset|Bath]], and noticed that his pigs would go into an alder-moor in cold weather and return covered in black mud. He found that the mud was warm, and that they did it to enjoy the heat. He also noticed that the pigs which did this did not suffer from skin diseases as others did, and on trying the mud bath himself found that he was cured of his leprosy. He was then restored to his position as heir-apparent to his father, and founded Bath so that others might also benefit as he had done. Wood also writes about [[Neo-Druidism]] which had been popularised in the 17th and 18th centuries by writers such as |
In many of Woods writings, and particularly ''The Essay towards a description of Bath'', he describes [[Bladud]], a legendary king of the [[Britons (historical)|Britons]] for whose existence there is no historical evidence, as the founder of Bath. Wood repeats and embellishes earlier stories that Bladud founded the city because while he was in Athens he contracted [[leprosy]], and when he returned home he was imprisoned as a result, but escaped and went far off to go into hiding. He found employment as a swineherd at [[Swainswick]], about two miles from the later site of [[Bath, Somerset|Bath]], and noticed that his pigs would go into an alder-moor in cold weather and return covered in black mud. He found that the mud was warm, and that they did it to enjoy the heat. He also noticed that the pigs which did this did not suffer from skin diseases as others did, and on trying the mud bath himself found that he was cured of his leprosy. He was then restored to his position as heir-apparent to his father, and founded Bath so that others might also benefit as he had done. Wood also writes about [[Neo-Druidism]] which had been popularised in the 17th and 18th centuries by writers such as [[John Aubrey]], [[John Toland]] and [[William Stukeley]] in conjunction with exploration of the stone circles at Stonehenge and Stanton Drew.<ref>{{Harvnb|Elliot|2004|pp=33–36.}}</ref> Like [[Inigo Jones]] before him, who had also surveyed Stonehenge, Wood's study of these two monuments had an important influence on his work in providing key dimensions for the Circus in Bath and confirming his interest in the local antiquity of circular and crescent forms.<ref>[[Hart, Vaughan]] (1989). ‘One View of a Town. Prior Park and the City of Bath’, ''RES: Journal of Anthropology and Aesthetics'', pp.140–157.</ref> |
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==Death and legacy== |
==Death and legacy== |
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Wood died in Bath on 23 May 1754.<ref>{{cite DNB |wstitle=Wood, John (1705?-1754) |first=Paul |last=Waterhouse |volume=62 |pages=363–64}}</ref> |
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⚫ | |||
⚫ | Many of his building projects were continued by his son [[John Wood, the Younger]], including the [[Royal Crescent]], [[Bath Assembly Rooms]]<ref>{{cite web |author=Historic England |url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=442119 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121018034231/http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=442119 |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 October 2012 |title=Assembly Rooms (442119) |work=[[Images of England]] |author-link = Historic England}}</ref> and [[Buckland House]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Buckland Park |url=http://www.berkshirehistory.com/castles/buckland_park.html |work=Royal Berkshire History |last=Ford |first=David Nash |year=2001 |access-date=19 September 2008}}</ref> He also finished [[The Circus (Bath)|The Circus]]. |
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Following his death in Bath, and almost certainly within hours of it, a plaster death mask was taken off the face of Wood. This was a not uncommon practice where the deceased was famous. The death mask may have been made as a prelude to the intended making of a portrait bust that was never executed in his widow's lifetime. Following the death of his widow in 1766, the death mask (doubtless amongst her possessions) was then employed to enable a bust of John Wood to be carved, appropriately from wood. It was completed in 1767 and the reverse of the bust bears an inscription of that date, the name of Wood and Wood's age at death. 1767 marks the commencement by Wood's son, John Wood the younger, of work on the Royal Crescent. The bust might have been carved by a specialist wood carver from the nearby commercial seaport of Bristol where ships’ figureheads would regularly have been carved, often from softwoods such as pine. The bust, in a private collection, records the features of the architect at his death, and is the only known bust portrait of the famous architect, and is one of only two portraits of him. The whereabouts of the face mask from which the bust is derived are not known and, presumably, the mask has not survived.<ref>D. Wilson, ‘A rare portrait of the architect and town planner of Bath, John Wood the elder’, ''The Georgian Group Journal'', Vol. XXIII [2015], pp. 47-64.</ref> |
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Only two portraits of Wood are known to exist, one of which is a wooden bust which was carved from a death mask.<ref>D. Wilson, 'A rare portrait of the architect and town planner of Bath, John Wood the elder', ''The Georgian Group Journal'', Vol. XXIII [2015], pp. 47–64.</ref> |
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There is an off-campus [[dormitory]] complex belonging to the [[University of Bath]] named John Wood Complex, on Avon Street. |
There is an off-campus [[dormitory]] complex belonging to the [[University of Bath]] named John Wood Complex, on Avon Street. |
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Bath is now a [[World Heritage Site]], at least partly as a result of the Woods' architecture.<ref>{{cite web|title=The City of Bath|url=https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/428|publisher=UNESCO| |
Bath is now a [[World Heritage Site]], at least partly as a result of the Woods' architecture.<ref>{{cite web|title=The City of Bath|url=https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/428|publisher=UNESCO|access-date=9 September 2012}}</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{reflist|30em}} |
{{reflist|30em}} |
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{{refbegin}} |
{{refbegin}} |
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* {{cite book |title=The myth maker: John Wood |
* {{cite book |title=The myth maker: John Wood 1704–1754 |last=Elliot |first=Kirsten |year=2004 |publisher=Akeman Press |isbn=978-0954613822 }} |
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* [[Hart, Vaughan]] (1989). ‘One View of a Town. Prior Park and the City of Bath’, ''RES: Journal of Anthropology and Aesthetics'', pp.140-157. |
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* {{cite book |title=Solving Stonehenge: The New Key to an Ancient Enigma | first=Anthony|last=Johnson | year=2008 | location=London | publisher=Thames & Hudson | isbn=978-0-500-05155-9| ref =harv | postscript =. }} |
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* {{cite book |title= |
* {{cite book |title=Solving Stonehenge: The New Key to an Ancient Enigma | first=Anthony|last=Johnson | year=2008 | location=London | publisher=Thames & Hudson | isbn=978-0-500-05155-9}} |
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* {{cite book |title=John Wood Architect of Obsession |last1=Mowl |first1=Tim | author-link = Timothy Mowl|last2=Earnshaw | first2=Brian |author-link2 = Brian Earnshaw|year=1988 |publisher=Millstream Books |isbn=978-0948975134 }} |
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* {{cite book |title=Georgian Summer: Bath in the Eighteenth Century |last=Gadd |first=David |
* {{cite book |title=Georgian Summer: Bath in the Eighteenth Century |last=Gadd |first=David |year=1988 |publisher=Countryside Books |isbn=978-0239000835 }} |
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*{{Cite book | |
*{{Cite book | last1 =Pollard| first1 =Richard | last2 = Pevsner | first2 = Nikolaus | author2-link =Nikolaus Pevsner| series= The Buildings of England|title =Lancashire: Liverpool and the South-West | publisher =[[Yale University Press]] | year =2006 | location =New Haven and London | isbn =0-300-10910-5 }} |
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* {{cite book |title=Choir Gaure, Vulgarly called Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain |last=Wood |first=John |authorlink= |year=1747 |publisher= |location=Oxford |isbn= |page= |pages= |accessdate=22 July 2012 |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Choir_gaure_vulgarly_called_Stonehenge_o.html?id=pUgGAAAAQAAJ| ref =harv}} |
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*{{cite book|last=Wood|first=John| |
* {{cite book |title=Choir Gaure, Vulgarly called Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain |last=Wood |first=John |year=1747 |location=Oxford |access-date=22 July 2012 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pUgGAAAAQAAJ}} |
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*{{cite book|last=Wood|first=John|title=An essay towards a description of Bath|year=1749|ol=16842454M}} |
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{{refend}} |
{{refend}} |
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Latest revision as of 07:53, 17 July 2024
John Wood | |
---|---|
Born | 1704 Twerton, England |
Died | Bath, England | 23 May 1754 (Aged 49–50)
Occupation | Architect |
Buildings | St John's Hospital, Prior Park, The Royal Mineral Water Hospital |
Projects | Queen Square, North and South Parades, The Circus |
John Wood, the Elder (1704 – 23 May 1754) was an English architect, working mainly in Bath.
In 1740 he surveyed Stonehenge and the Stanton Drew stone circles. He later wrote extensively about Bladud and Neo-Druidism. Because of some of his designs he is also thought to have been involved in the early years of Freemasonry.
His notable work in Bath included: St John's Hospital, Queen Square, Prior Park, The Royal Mineral Water Hospital, the North and South Parades and The Circus. Wood also designed important buildings outside Bath, including the reconstruction of Llandaff Cathedral, Buckland House, The Exchange, Bristol, and Liverpool Town Hall. He has been described by Nikolaus Pevsner as "one of the outstanding architects of the day".[1]
Early life
[edit]Wood was born in Twerton near Bath, and baptised in St. James's Church (now demolished). He received a good but basic education at King Edward's School.[2] His father George was a local builder.
During his teenage years and early twenties, Wood worked for Robert Benson, the first Baron Bingley at his estate, Bramham Park, Yorkshire. He then became involved in speculative builds on the Cavendish estate in London. [3][4][5]
Style and vision
[edit]Through reading, site visits and practical experience Wood developed his unique ideas in order to create a master plan for his home town of such ambition it is almost overwhelming.[6] Through his continual self-education, Wood refined his architectural beliefs and by his mid-twenties had combined his passion for Palladianism (a type of classical architecture) with his obsession with Ancient British history, and almost certainly Freemasonry.[7]
Wood set out to restore Bath to what he believed was its former ancient glory as one of the most important and significant cities in England. In 1725 he developed an ambitious plan for his home town, which due to opposition he developed outside the existing city walls.[8] Wood created a distinctive image for the city, one that has greatly contributed to Bath's continuing popularity.[7]
Wood's grand plans for Bath were consistently hampered by the corporation (council), churchmen, landowners and moneymen. Instead he approached Robert Gay, a barber surgeon from London, and the owner of the Barton Farm estate in the Manor of Walcot, outside the city walls.[6] On these fields Wood established Bath's architectural style, the basic principles of which were copied by all those architects who came after him. Wood created one of the greatest attractions in the world, recognised by UNESCO for embodying a number of outstanding universal values — including the deliberate creation of a beautiful and unified city.[6]
Speculative Building
[edit]At Queen Square, Wood introduced speculative building to Bath. This meant that whilst Wood leased the land from Robert Gay for £137 per annum, designed the frontages, and divided the ground into the individual building plots, he sub-let to other individual builders or masons. They had two years grace in which to get the walls up and the roof on, after which they had to pay a more substantial rent.[9] As Bath was booming, most plots were reserved before the two years were up, providing the builder with the necessary income to complete the house. Ultimately this meant less work and risk for Wood; in addition he received £305 per annum in rents, leaving him a healthy profit of £168 – the equivalent today (in terms of average earnings) of £306,000.[6]
Bath architecture
[edit]Wood is known for designing many of the streets and buildings of Bath, such as St John's Hospital,[10] (1727–28), Queen Square (1728–36), Prior Park (1734–41),[11] The Royal Mineral Water Hospital (1738–42) the North (1740) and South Parades (1743–48), The Circus (1754–68),[12] and other notable houses, many of which are Grade I listed buildings.
In 1716 the architect William Killigrew was commissioned to rebuild the St John's Hospital, which had been founded around 1180, by Bishop Reginald Fitz Jocelin making it among the oldest almshouses in England.[13] Construction continued after 1727 with John Wood, the Elder undertaking the building, as his first work in Bath, when he was aged 23.[10]
Ralph Allen's Town House was commissioned by Ralph Allen who commenced building it in or shortly after 1727. Opinion is divided as to whether John Wood the Elder designed the "Town House",[14][15] however the ostentatious decoration is not a style he uses elsewhere in Bath. Wood, in his "Essay towards the future of Bath", says — while Mr.Allen was making the Addition to the North Part of his House in Lilliput Alley he new fronted and raised the old Building a full Story higher; it consists of a Basement Story sustaining a double Story under the Crowning; and this is surmounted by an Attick, which created a sixth Rate House, and a Sample for the greatest Magnificence that was ever proposed by me for our City Houses.[16]
Queen Square was Wood's first speculative development. Wood lived in a house on the square.[17] Numbers 21–27 make up the north side.[18] Which was described by Nikolaus Pevsner as "one of the finest Palladian compositions in England before 1730".[19] The west side (numbers 14 – 18 and 18A, 19 & 20) was designed by John Pinch in 1830 and differs from Wood's original design as the central block is in Neo-Grecian style.[20] 16–18 is now occupied by the Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution. The south side (numbers 5–13) which was originally left open is now occupied by a hotel.[21]
In 1742, Wood was commissioned to build a home for the mayor of Bath Ralph Allen, on a hill overlooking the city of Bath. This building is Grade I listed and has housed Prior Park College since 1830.[11]
The building for the Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases was designed by Wood and built with Bath Stone donated by Ralph Allen. It was later enlarged, firstly in 1793 by the addition of an attic storey and later in 1860 by a second building erected on the west side of the earlier edifice. It is a Grade II listed building.[22] There is a fine pediment, in Bath stone, on 1860 building depicting the parable of the Good Samaritan.
North Parade was part of a wider scheme to build a Royal Forum, including South Parade, Pierrepont and Duke Streets, similar to Queen Square, which was never completed. Wood designed the facade, of Bath Stone, after which a variety of builders completed the work with different interiors and rear elevations.[23]
Wood Street was built in 1778 and has been designated as a Grade I listed building.[24] The street was designed by John Wood, the Elder and built by Thomas Baldwin in the same style as the adjacent Queen Square.
His final masterpiece was the Circus,[25] built on Barton Fields outside the old city walls of Bath, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son, John Wood, the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design. Wood's inspiration was the Roman Colosseum, but whereas the Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. Three classical Orders, (Greek Doric, Roman/Composite and Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The frieze of the Doric entablature is decorated with alternating triglyphs and 525 pictorial emblems, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and masonic symbols. The parapet is adorned with stone acorn finials. He demonstrated how a row of town houses could be dignified, almost palatial. The uses of uniform facades and rhythmic proportions in conjunction with classical principles of unerring symmetry were followed throughout the city.
Architecture outside Bath
[edit]Wood also designed important buildings outside Bath, the reconstruction of Llandaff Cathedral[26] 1734–1749, The Exchange, Bristol[26] 1741–43, Liverpool Town Hall[27] 1749–54.
Wood's work on the rebuilding of Llandaff Cathedral gained the nicknamed of the "Italian Temple". It was used for a hundred years but never completed and only a few stones remain.[26]
The Exchange in Bristol was built in 1741–43 by Wood, with carvings by Thomas Paty. Wood was also the architect of the Liverpool Exchange, which was completed in 1754 and gutted by fire in 1795. The London Exchange of Wood's day was also destroyed by fire in 1838. Bristol's Exchange is therefore unique, the only surviving 18th-century exchange building in England. When finished in 1743 the Exchange, as planned, had "the outward appearance of one grand structure," and the much-admired exterior remains today largely as built. The front of the building has Corinthian columns in the centre and pilasters to the sides. A central semicircular-arched doorway has cast-iron lion-head knockers. A frieze with human and animal heads symbolises trade, and a royal coat of arms is displayed in the tympanum. The rear of the building is symmetrical with pedimented windows and semicircular ground-floor arches.[28]
Liverpool Town Hall was built between 1749 and 1754 to a design by Wood replacing an earlier town hall nearby. An extension to the north designed by James Wyatt was added in 1785. The ground floor acted as the exchange, and a council room and other offices were on the upper floor.[1] The ground floor had a central courtyard surrounded by Doric colonnades but it was "dark and confined, and the merchants preferred to transact business in the street outside".[29] Following a fire in 1795 the hall was largely rebuilt and the portico and dome were added by James Wyatt who also redesigned the interiors.
Buckland House is a large Georgian stately home and the manor house of Buckland in Oxfordshire built in 1757. Sir Robert Throckmorton, the fourth baronet of Coughton,[30] who commissioned Wood to design the new Buckland House[31] as a shooting lodge and weekend retreat.[30][32] John Wood, the Younger substantially revised the plan and added the distinctive octagonal pavilions to the sides of the house. The final house is illustrated in the 1767 volume of Vitruvius Britannicus.[31]
Stonehenge and Stanton Drew surveys
[edit]Wood also left us the most important plan of Stonehenge ever made; his survey, carried out in 1740 and published in his Choir Gaure, Vulgarly Called Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain (1747),[33] was annotated with hundreds of measurements, which he resolved on the ground to one half, sometimes even one quarter, of an inch.[34][35] This work has been largely overlooked, partly due to criticisms made by the antiquarian William Stukeley.[36] Wood's interpretation of the monument as a place of pagan ritual was vehemently attacked by Stukeley who saw the druids not as pagans, but as biblical patriarchs.[37] Stukely also failed to see the significance of recording the stones in such detail. However, using Wood's original dimensions it has been possible to re-draw his work on a computer and compare the record with the modern plan of Stonehenge. His survey has immense archaeological value, for he recorded the stones fifty years before the collapse of the western trilithon (which fell in 1797 and was not restored until 1958).[38]
In the same year Wood surveyed and mapped the Stanton Drew stone circles, noting the different stones used and suggesting the layout was based on the Pythagorean planetary system.[39]
Freemasonry
[edit]Many of the buildings he designed are littered with icons and symbols associated with Freemasonry, leading many people who have studied his work to believe that he was a member of the organisation, even though there is no documentary proof. Wood wrote extensively about sacred geometry, and argued that the myths of the supposed founder of Bath, King Bladud, were based on truth. He claimed that ancient British stone circles were the remains of once more elaborate buildings designed by Bladud.
It has been suggested that Wood (and his son, also John) were connected to Freemasonry either via one of their building partnerships and/or via symbolism in their architecture. In his Masonic lecture and article, Stephen Ben Cox tentatively suggests an image for this as the square (Queen's Square), the circle (The Circus) and the crescent (The Royal Crescent): standing for Earth, Sun and Moon, and following the masonic path of the sun in the Lodge from east (the Master chair) to south (the Junior Warden) and exiting in the west (the Senior Warden) as a symbol of man's spiritual progress in life from the rough to the smooth ashlar.[40]
When viewed from the air, the Circus, along with Queens Square and the adjoining Gay Street, form a key shape, which is a masonic symbol similar to those that adorn many of Wood's buildings.[41] Cox notes that there is no direct evidence of deliberate Masonic expression in the architecture (although there are plenty of carved signs and symbols which are important to Freemasonry). He goes on however to say that it is interesting to note that Queen Square is lower down the hill whilst The Circus overlooks it at the top of the hill, whilst to the west The Crescent faces out across the open space of the park sloping away from it.
Media proprietor Felix Farley (c. 1708–1753) published Wood's The Origin of Building: Or, The Plagiarism of the Heathens Detected, In Five Books.[42]
Bladud and the druids
[edit]In many of Woods writings, and particularly The Essay towards a description of Bath, he describes Bladud, a legendary king of the Britons for whose existence there is no historical evidence, as the founder of Bath. Wood repeats and embellishes earlier stories that Bladud founded the city because while he was in Athens he contracted leprosy, and when he returned home he was imprisoned as a result, but escaped and went far off to go into hiding. He found employment as a swineherd at Swainswick, about two miles from the later site of Bath, and noticed that his pigs would go into an alder-moor in cold weather and return covered in black mud. He found that the mud was warm, and that they did it to enjoy the heat. He also noticed that the pigs which did this did not suffer from skin diseases as others did, and on trying the mud bath himself found that he was cured of his leprosy. He was then restored to his position as heir-apparent to his father, and founded Bath so that others might also benefit as he had done. Wood also writes about Neo-Druidism which had been popularised in the 17th and 18th centuries by writers such as John Aubrey, John Toland and William Stukeley in conjunction with exploration of the stone circles at Stonehenge and Stanton Drew.[43] Like Inigo Jones before him, who had also surveyed Stonehenge, Wood's study of these two monuments had an important influence on his work in providing key dimensions for the Circus in Bath and confirming his interest in the local antiquity of circular and crescent forms.[44]
Death and legacy
[edit]Wood died in Bath on 23 May 1754.[45]
Many of his building projects were continued by his son John Wood, the Younger, including the Royal Crescent, Bath Assembly Rooms[46] and Buckland House.[47] He also finished The Circus.
Only two portraits of Wood are known to exist, one of which is a wooden bust which was carved from a death mask.[48]
There is an off-campus dormitory complex belonging to the University of Bath named John Wood Complex, on Avon Street.
Bath is now a World Heritage Site, at least partly as a result of the Woods' architecture.[49]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Pollard & Pevsner 2006, p. 286.
- ^ Elliot 2004, p. 56.
- ^ Mowl & Earnshaw, Tim & Brian (1988). John Wood: Architect of Obsession. Bath: Millstream Books. p. 66. ISBN 094897513X.
- ^ Mowl & Earnshaw 1988, pp. 13–14
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