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George Henry Walton

George Henry Walton (3 June 1867 Glasgow – 10 December 1933 London), was a noted Scottish architect and designer of remarkable diversity.

George Henry Walton (1923) by Sir William Oliphant Hutchison
A copper and stained glass door panel designed by George Henry Walton for the luncheon room at Miss Cranston's Argyle Street Tea Rooms
Painted panel by George Henry Walton used for Miss Cranston's Argyle Street Tea rooms
Button used by Walton on his furniture designs

Biography

George Walton was born in Glasgow in 1862. He was the youngest of twelve talented children of Jackson Walton, a Manchester commission agent and himself an accomplished painter and photographer, by his second wife, the Aberdeen-born Quaker Eliza Ann Nicholson. George was a brother of the painter Edward Arthur Walton of the Glasgow School.[1]

Work in Glasgow and Scarborough

His father's death in 1873 left the family in straitened circumstances, and at the age of thirteen George started work as a clerk with the British Linen Bank. With a view to a different career, he attended art classes in the evenings at the Glasgow School of Art and with Peter McGregor Wilson (1856–1928) at the short-lived Glasgow Atelier of Fine Arts. When he was commissioned to redesign one of Miss Cranston's tea rooms at 114 Argyle Street in Glasgow, Walton started his own decorating company, George Walton & Co, Ecclesiastical and House Decorators, in 1888 at 152 Wellington Street.[2] The peacock became the firm’s emblem.[3] His arts and crafts style of decoration, including his woodblock printed wallpaper production, was influenced by William Morris[4] and included stencilling, a common technique in Scotland at this time, and highly decorated wall surfaces in floral patterns, in line with prevailing fashion and also influenced by Japanese pattern books reflecting Glasgow’s then active trade with Japan. He was also greatly influenced by James Whistler[5]

His work ventured into almost every avenue of decorative art, helping to pioneer the distinctive Glasgow Style. In 1890 he employed Robert Graham, the future manager of the company in 1903–05, and met the Quaker architect Fred Rowntree (1860–1927)[6] at an amateur dramatic performance. On 3 June 1891 Walton married Kate Gall, a London girl from an affluent family, and moved into Charing Cross Mansions. Their daughter was born in 1892.[7]

In the 1890s he was responsible for decorating St Peter’s Episcopal Church in Braid Street, Glasgow.[8] The company became known for its stained glass, exhibiting at the Glasgow Institute in 1889 [9] He was one of the pioneers in the use of domestic stained glass in Glasgow.[10] In 1892 he worked on the house of the shipping magnate William Burrell and in 1893 he decorated ‘Drumalis’ the mansion owned by Sir Hugh Houston Smiley, 1st Baronet located in Larne, Northern Ireland and this remains his most complete extant company job.[11]

Walton's firm rapidly diversified, winning commissions in woodwork, furniture making and stained glass. From 1896 Walton partnered with Fred Rowntree, in Rowntree family projects in their home town of Scarborough. In 1896, this led to his first commission in England [12] for John Rowntree, who owned a cafe in the town.[13] This project saw Walton’s first significant foray into furniture design, including the distinctive ‘Abingwood’ chair. Walton’s style by this stage was developing restrained ornament set off against plain surfaces.[14]

In the same year he decorated and furnished Miss Cranston's Buchanan Street tea room, originally designed by George Washington Browne where Walton continued to develop his stencilling technique having abandoned wallpaper in favour of this more versatile technique. A review by Joseph Gleeson White commented on the elegant simplicity of Walton’s design despite the involvement of Washington Brown, whose work was considered heavy-handed.[15] Walton also designed the furniture which was noted for its ‘sinuous verticality’ and accorded with the Glasgow Style aesthetic.[16]

Work in London and with photographers

In 1896 Walton converted his company into a limited joint-stock company with the majority of the shares held by Walton and most of the rest of the shares held by Rowntree and in 1897 Walton joined his brother Edward in London and set up house at 16 Westbourne Park Grove, Bayswater where he had a studio in the garden.[17] He now styled himself as an artist in the Post Office Directory, instead of a painter and decorator.[18]

In London his work came from personal connections with photographers. Through his friendship with the Glasgow photographer James Craig Annan, he designed a salon in the Dudley Gallery, Piccadilly, London. This commission involved placing pictures in groups and sub-groups in an irregular pattern with varying spaces between frames and rejected traditional practices of ‘skying and diving’ (which involved covering every available wall space). The Photography Annual declared this to be ‘the first time the geometrical, symmetrical, traditional manner had been completely abandoned’. In this exhibition he displayed only the highest quality pictures on a burnt sienna canvas.[19]

In London he met George Davison (1854–1930) who was employed by Eastman Kodak. Through him Walton designed two rooms at the Eastman Exhibition which was critically acclaimed as ‘the biggest and best thing ever done’ in Britain by way of a photographic exhibition [20] This led to a commission to design a new head office and showroom for Eastman’s European operations on Clerkenwell Road[21] and later their new showroom at 171-3 Regent Street[22] Walton went on to design up to three showroom designs for the company across Europe every year and each of them had Walton’s Glasgow flavour which made them distinct and novel. His commissions to design Kodak showrooms in the United Kingdom and Europe (London, Glasgow, Brussels, Milan, Vienna and Moscow) brought him international fame. He also designed the company's product packaging.[23]

Further work in Glasgow and Yorkshire

Walton worked on Ledcameroch, Bearsden near Glasgow for J B Gow, in 1897 where there was a lightness of touch reflecting his recent experience in exhibition design. In 1898 he worked on William Seaton’s tea room chain in Glasgow and in Yorkshire. A major commission from 1898 was the redecorating and furnishing of Elm Bank, York, for Sidney Leetham which included Japanese elements. Elm Bank is now a hotel and his work here reflected a new assurance in his approach.[24]

His company opened a showroom in York's 21 Stonegate in 1898 and erected a four-storey block of workshops at 35-7 Buccleuch Street, in Glasgow in 1899 and 1900. From 1901 Walton undertook the construction of complete buildings, making use of experience from his association with Fred Rowntree. In 1901 Walton made the unusual step of becoming an architect, while many architects crossed over to interior design few moved in the other direction. His first commission was ‘The Leys’ for James Brooker Blakemoor Wellington (1858–1939) of Wellington & Ward Ltd, photographic materials manufacturers and previously of the Eastman company. The house is arts and crafts in style, large and unpretentious using vernacular materials and detailing with a triple-height hall containing one of his finest fireplace designs. The building has plain interiors and a simplicity of design reflecting a leaner and more sophisticated Walton [25] His increasing reputation among photographers also led to more commissions for exhibitions.[26]

Increasing prosperity and focus on work in England

As Walton increased his activity and prosperity in 1901 he moved to a more fashionable address at 44 Holland Park Road in Holland Park. He resigned from George Walton & Co on 17 January 1903 and the York branch closed shortly afterwards and on 30 June 1905 the remaining partners wound up the company, which was based mainly in Glasgow.[27] From then on Walton practised only as architect and designer. He continued to work on interiors, such as Alma House, Cheltenham and Finnart House, Weybridge, developing a more classical style.[28]

Work at Harlech

 
Photographic panorama showing Harlech Castle, Coleg Harlech and St David's Hotel, taken from the course of The Royal St David's Golf Club

In 1906 George Davison decided to build a house at Harlech where his school friend Harry More, Crown Agent for the Forestry Commission in Wales, lived. At this time Harlech had several English families whose social life revolved around Lord Winchelsea, whose brother established the St David’s golf course in 1894. While developing his idea for a house he also proposed a hotel for golfers using the new golf course, on the recommendation of his English acquaintances in Harlech. By 1907 Walton completed his first designs for the hotel and the ‘Harlech Hotel and Land Development Syndicate Ltd’ was established. The hotel was known as the St David's Hotel.

Davison had expressed a desire for his own castle at Harlech and this defined the brief for the design of his house, which became known as Wern Fawr (now part of Coleg Harlech), a solid and heavy building built in the Georgian style, made of stone blocks and set on the edge of a cliff, mirroring Harlech Castle itself. Wern Fawr, built 1907-1908, reflected the developing vogue at this time for English Classicism.[29]

Admission as an architect and later life

Walton was admitted as Licentiate of the Royal Institute of British Architects on 20 July 1911, his proposer being his long-standing friend Charles Edward Mallows. From 1905 he had worked from an even grander home at 26 Emperor's Gate in Kensington, but following the outbreak of World War I, commissions were scarce. His wife Kate died and the generous financial support from the Gall family ceased. In 1916 Walton moved to Carlisle and between 1916 and 1921, working under Harry Redfern, he produced designs for pubs and canteens for the Central Control Board, established to manage the drinks trade and public houses in many munitions production areas.

Walton married a colleague, Dorothy (Daphne) Jeram, daughter of a Hampshire doctor on 20 November 1918, and a son was born in 1920. In 1919 Walton attempted to revive his private practice, with the support of various friends and the Scottish portrait-painter William Oliphant Hutchison (1889–1970), who had married his niece, and painted a striking portrait of Walton 10 years before his death. He now worked mainly as a textile designer for Morton Sundour Fabrics of Carlisle, but this work also ceased due to the recession and a falling-off in demand for Art Nouveau designs. In March 1931 the Waltons moved to 70 Seabrook Road in Hythe to cut down on living expenses.

A despondent Walton died on 10 December 1933. John Betjeman obtained a civil list pension for his widow. Walton's drawings and photographs relating to his later practice are in the British Architectural Library Collection.[30][31]

Bibliography

  • George Walton: Designer and Architect – Karen Moon (White Cockade Publishing, 2001) ISBN 1-873487-01-0[32]

References

  1. ^ Moon, Karen: George Walton: Designer and Architect, pages 15-20. Oxford: White Cockade Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1-873487-01-0
  2. ^ Moon, page 23
  3. ^ Moon, page 34
  4. ^ Moon, page 23-25
  5. ^ Moon, pages 28-29
  6. ^ David Goold. "Dictionary of Scottish Architects – DSA Architect Biography Report (February 19, 2010, 7:51 pm)". Scottisharchitects.org.uk. Retrieved 19 February 2010.
  7. ^ Moon, page 26
  8. ^ Moon, page 24
  9. ^ Moon, page 27
  10. ^ Moon, page 96
  11. ^ Moon, page 34
  12. ^ Moon, page 41
  13. ^ Moon, page 45
  14. ^ Moon, pages 46-48
  15. ^ Moon, page 51
  16. ^ Moon, page 53
  17. ^ Moon, pages 57-58
  18. ^ Moon, pages 59-60
  19. ^ Moon, pages 59-60
  20. ^ Moon, page 61
  21. ^ Moon, page 62
  22. ^ Moon, page 71-74
  23. ^ Moon, page 80-82
  24. ^ Moon, pages 64-70
  25. ^ Moon, pages 83-91
  26. ^ Moon, pages 76-78
  27. ^ Moon, page 116
  28. ^ Moon, page 117-123
  29. ^ Moon, page 137-138
  30. ^ "Brussels armchair". TheGlasgowStory. Retrieved 19 February 2010.
  31. ^ David Goold. "Dictionary of Scottish Architects – DSA Architect Biography Report (February 19, 2010, 7:51 pm)". Scottisharchitects.org.uk. Retrieved 19 February 2010.
  32. ^ "George Walton: Designer and Architect (9781873487013): Karen Moon: Books". Amazon.com. Retrieved 19 February 2010.

george, henry, walton, june, 1867, glasgow, december, 1933, london, noted, scottish, architect, designer, remarkable, diversity, 1923, william, oliphant, hutchison, copper, stained, glass, door, panel, designed, luncheon, room, miss, cranston, argyle, street, . George Henry Walton 3 June 1867 Glasgow 10 December 1933 London was a noted Scottish architect and designer of remarkable diversity George Henry Walton 1923 by Sir William Oliphant Hutchison A copper and stained glass door panel designed by George Henry Walton for the luncheon room at Miss Cranston s Argyle Street Tea Rooms Painted panel by George Henry Walton used for Miss Cranston s Argyle Street Tea rooms Button used by Walton on his furniture designs Contents 1 Biography 2 Work in Glasgow and Scarborough 3 Work in London and with photographers 4 Further work in Glasgow and Yorkshire 5 Increasing prosperity and focus on work in England 6 Work at Harlech 7 Admission as an architect and later life 8 Bibliography 9 ReferencesBiography EditGeorge Walton was born in Glasgow in 1862 He was the youngest of twelve talented children of Jackson Walton a Manchester commission agent and himself an accomplished painter and photographer by his second wife the Aberdeen born Quaker Eliza Ann Nicholson George was a brother of the painter Edward Arthur Walton of the Glasgow School 1 Work in Glasgow and Scarborough EditHis father s death in 1873 left the family in straitened circumstances and at the age of thirteen George started work as a clerk with the British Linen Bank With a view to a different career he attended art classes in the evenings at the Glasgow School of Art and with Peter McGregor Wilson 1856 1928 at the short lived Glasgow Atelier of Fine Arts When he was commissioned to redesign one of Miss Cranston s tea rooms at 114 Argyle Street in Glasgow Walton started his own decorating company George Walton amp Co Ecclesiastical and House Decorators in 1888 at 152 Wellington Street 2 The peacock became the firm s emblem 3 His arts and crafts style of decoration including his woodblock printed wallpaper production was influenced by William Morris 4 and included stencilling a common technique in Scotland at this time and highly decorated wall surfaces in floral patterns in line with prevailing fashion and also influenced by Japanese pattern books reflecting Glasgow s then active trade with Japan He was also greatly influenced by James Whistler 5 His work ventured into almost every avenue of decorative art helping to pioneer the distinctive Glasgow Style In 1890 he employed Robert Graham the future manager of the company in 1903 05 and met the Quaker architect Fred Rowntree 1860 1927 6 at an amateur dramatic performance On 3 June 1891 Walton married Kate Gall a London girl from an affluent family and moved into Charing Cross Mansions Their daughter was born in 1892 7 In the 1890s he was responsible for decorating St Peter s Episcopal Church in Braid Street Glasgow 8 The company became known for its stained glass exhibiting at the Glasgow Institute in 1889 9 He was one of the pioneers in the use of domestic stained glass in Glasgow 10 In 1892 he worked on the house of the shipping magnate William Burrell and in 1893 he decorated Drumalis the mansion owned by Sir Hugh Houston Smiley 1st Baronet located in Larne Northern Ireland and this remains his most complete extant company job 11 Walton s firm rapidly diversified winning commissions in woodwork furniture making and stained glass From 1896 Walton partnered with Fred Rowntree in Rowntree family projects in their home town of Scarborough In 1896 this led to his first commission in England 12 for John Rowntree who owned a cafe in the town 13 This project saw Walton s first significant foray into furniture design including the distinctive Abingwood chair Walton s style by this stage was developing restrained ornament set off against plain surfaces 14 In the same year he decorated and furnished Miss Cranston s Buchanan Street tea room originally designed by George Washington Browne where Walton continued to develop his stencilling technique having abandoned wallpaper in favour of this more versatile technique A review by Joseph Gleeson White commented on the elegant simplicity of Walton s design despite the involvement of Washington Brown whose work was considered heavy handed 15 Walton also designed the furniture which was noted for its sinuous verticality and accorded with the Glasgow Style aesthetic 16 Work in London and with photographers EditIn 1896 Walton converted his company into a limited joint stock company with the majority of the shares held by Walton and most of the rest of the shares held by Rowntree and in 1897 Walton joined his brother Edward in London and set up house at 16 Westbourne Park Grove Bayswater where he had a studio in the garden 17 He now styled himself as an artist in the Post Office Directory instead of a painter and decorator 18 In London his work came from personal connections with photographers Through his friendship with the Glasgow photographer James Craig Annan he designed a salon in the Dudley Gallery Piccadilly London This commission involved placing pictures in groups and sub groups in an irregular pattern with varying spaces between frames and rejected traditional practices of skying and diving which involved covering every available wall space The Photography Annual declared this to be the first time the geometrical symmetrical traditional manner had been completely abandoned In this exhibition he displayed only the highest quality pictures on a burnt sienna canvas 19 In London he met George Davison 1854 1930 who was employed by Eastman Kodak Through him Walton designed two rooms at the Eastman Exhibition which was critically acclaimed as the biggest and best thing ever done in Britain by way of a photographic exhibition 20 This led to a commission to design a new head office and showroom for Eastman s European operations on Clerkenwell Road 21 and later their new showroom at 171 3 Regent Street 22 Walton went on to design up to three showroom designs for the company across Europe every year and each of them had Walton s Glasgow flavour which made them distinct and novel His commissions to design Kodak showrooms in the United Kingdom and Europe London Glasgow Brussels Milan Vienna and Moscow brought him international fame He also designed the company s product packaging 23 Further work in Glasgow and Yorkshire EditWalton worked on Ledcameroch Bearsden near Glasgow for J B Gow in 1897 where there was a lightness of touch reflecting his recent experience in exhibition design In 1898 he worked on William Seaton s tea room chain in Glasgow and in Yorkshire A major commission from 1898 was the redecorating and furnishing of Elm Bank York for Sidney Leetham which included Japanese elements Elm Bank is now a hotel and his work here reflected a new assurance in his approach 24 His company opened a showroom in York s 21 Stonegate in 1898 and erected a four storey block of workshops at 35 7 Buccleuch Street in Glasgow in 1899 and 1900 From 1901 Walton undertook the construction of complete buildings making use of experience from his association with Fred Rowntree In 1901 Walton made the unusual step of becoming an architect while many architects crossed over to interior design few moved in the other direction His first commission was The Leys for James Brooker Blakemoor Wellington 1858 1939 of Wellington amp Ward Ltd photographic materials manufacturers and previously of the Eastman company The house is arts and crafts in style large and unpretentious using vernacular materials and detailing with a triple height hall containing one of his finest fireplace designs The building has plain interiors and a simplicity of design reflecting a leaner and more sophisticated Walton 25 His increasing reputation among photographers also led to more commissions for exhibitions 26 Increasing prosperity and focus on work in England EditAs Walton increased his activity and prosperity in 1901 he moved to a more fashionable address at 44 Holland Park Road in Holland Park He resigned from George Walton amp Co on 17 January 1903 and the York branch closed shortly afterwards and on 30 June 1905 the remaining partners wound up the company which was based mainly in Glasgow 27 From then on Walton practised only as architect and designer He continued to work on interiors such as Alma House Cheltenham and Finnart House Weybridge developing a more classical style 28 Work at Harlech Edit Photographic panorama showing Harlech Castle Coleg Harlech and St David s Hotel taken from the course of The Royal St David s Golf Club In 1906 George Davison decided to build a house at Harlech where his school friend Harry More Crown Agent for the Forestry Commission in Wales lived At this time Harlech had several English families whose social life revolved around Lord Winchelsea whose brother established the St David s golf course in 1894 While developing his idea for a house he also proposed a hotel for golfers using the new golf course on the recommendation of his English acquaintances in Harlech By 1907 Walton completed his first designs for the hotel and the Harlech Hotel and Land Development Syndicate Ltd was established The hotel was known as the St David s Hotel Davison had expressed a desire for his own castle at Harlech and this defined the brief for the design of his house which became known as Wern Fawr now part of Coleg Harlech a solid and heavy building built in the Georgian style made of stone blocks and set on the edge of a cliff mirroring Harlech Castle itself Wern Fawr built 1907 1908 reflected the developing vogue at this time for English Classicism 29 Admission as an architect and later life EditWalton was admitted as Licentiate of the Royal Institute of British Architects on 20 July 1911 his proposer being his long standing friend Charles Edward Mallows From 1905 he had worked from an even grander home at 26 Emperor s Gate in Kensington but following the outbreak of World War I commissions were scarce His wife Kate died and the generous financial support from the Gall family ceased In 1916 Walton moved to Carlisle and between 1916 and 1921 working under Harry Redfern he produced designs for pubs and canteens for the Central Control Board established to manage the drinks trade and public houses in many munitions production areas Walton married a colleague Dorothy Daphne Jeram daughter of a Hampshire doctor on 20 November 1918 and a son was born in 1920 In 1919 Walton attempted to revive his private practice with the support of various friends and the Scottish portrait painter William Oliphant Hutchison 1889 1970 who had married his niece and painted a striking portrait of Walton 10 years before his death He now worked mainly as a textile designer for Morton Sundour Fabrics of Carlisle but this work also ceased due to the recession and a falling off in demand for Art Nouveau designs In March 1931 the Waltons moved to 70 Seabrook Road in Hythe to cut down on living expenses A despondent Walton died on 10 December 1933 John Betjeman obtained a civil list pension for his widow Walton s drawings and photographs relating to his later practice are in the British Architectural Library Collection 30 31 Bibliography EditGeorge Walton Designer and Architect Karen Moon White Cockade Publishing 2001 ISBN 1 873487 01 0 32 References Edit Moon Karen George Walton Designer and Architect pages 15 20 Oxford White Cockade Publishing 2001 ISBN 1 873487 01 0 Moon page 23 Moon page 34 Moon page 23 25 Moon pages 28 29 David Goold Dictionary of Scottish Architects DSA Architect Biography Report February 19 2010 7 51 pm Scottisharchitects org uk Retrieved 19 February 2010 Moon page 26 Moon page 24 Moon page 27 Moon page 96 Moon page 34 Moon page 41 Moon page 45 Moon pages 46 48 Moon page 51 Moon page 53 Moon pages 57 58 Moon pages 59 60 Moon pages 59 60 Moon page 61 Moon page 62 Moon page 71 74 Moon page 80 82 Moon pages 64 70 Moon pages 83 91 Moon pages 76 78 Moon page 116 Moon page 117 123 Moon page 137 138 Brussels armchair TheGlasgowStory Retrieved 19 February 2010 David Goold Dictionary of Scottish Architects DSA Architect Biography Report February 19 2010 7 51 pm Scottisharchitects org uk Retrieved 19 February 2010 George Walton Designer and Architect 9781873487013 Karen Moon Books Amazon com Retrieved 19 February 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Henry Walton amp oldid 1128377841, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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