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James Wyatt

James Wyatt PRA (3 August 1746 – 4 September 1813) was an English architect, a rival of Robert Adam in the neoclassical and neo-Gothic styles. He was elected to the Royal Academy in 1785 and was its president from 1805 to 1806.

James Wyatt
Mezzotint after a portrait by Wyatt's son Matthew Cotes Wyatt
Born(1746-08-03)3 August 1746
Blackbrook Farm, Weeford, Staffordshire, England
Died4 September 1813(1813-09-04) (aged 67)
2 miles east of Marlborough in carriage accident
NationalityEnglish
OccupationArchitect
SpouseRachel Lunn
Children4 sons, including Benjamin Dean, Matthew Cotes, Philip
BuildingsFonthill Abbey

Early life

Wyatt was born on 3 August 1746 at Weeford, near Lichfield, Staffordshire, England.[1]

Early classical career

Wyatt spent six years in Italy, 1762–68, in company with Richard Bagot of Staffordshire, who was Secretary to the Earl of Northampton's embassy to the Venetian Republic. In Venice, Wyatt studied with Antonio Visentini (1688–1782) as an architectural draughtsman and painter. In Rome he made measured drawings of the dome of St. Peter's Basilica, "being under the necessity of lying on his back on a ladder slung horizontally, without cradle or side-rail, over a frightful void of 300 feet".

Back in England, his selection as architect of the proposed Pantheon or "Winter Ranelagh" in Oxford Street, London, brought him almost unparalleled instant success. His brother Samuel was one of the principal promoters of the scheme, and it was doubtless due to him that the designs of a young and almost unknown architect were accepted by the committee. When the Pantheon was opened in 1772, their choice was at once endorsed by the fashionable public: Horace Walpole pronounced it to be "the most beautiful edifice in England".

 
Wyatt's "Pantheon" in Oxford Street, London

Externally it was unremarkable, but the classicising domed hall surrounded by galleried aisles and apsidal ends was something new in assembly rooms, and brought its architect immediate celebrity. The design was exhibited at the Royal Academy, private commissions followed, and at the age of 26 Wyatt found himself a fashionable domestic architect and on 27 August 1770 an Associate of the Royal Academy.[2] His polished manners secured him friends as well as patrons among the great, and when it was rumoured that he was about to leave the country to become architect to Catherine II of Russia, a group of English noblemen is said to have offered him a retaining fee of £1,200 to remain in their service. His major neoclassical country houses include Heaton Hall near Manchester (1772), Heveningham Hall in Suffolk (circa 1788–99), and Castle Coole in Ireland, as well as Packington Hall in Staffordshire, the home of the Levett family for generations, and Dodington Park in Gloucestershire for the Codrington family. On 15 February 1785 Wyatt was elected an Academician of the Royal Academy,[1] his diploma work being a drawing of the Darnley Mausoleum.[2]

Later classical work

In later years, he carried out alterations at Frogmore for Queen Charlotte, and was made Surveyor-General of the Works. In about 1800, he was commissioned to carry out alterations to Windsor Castle which would probably have been much more considerable had it not been for the King's illness, and in 1802 he designed for the King the "strange castellated palace" at Kew which was remarkable for the extensive employment of cast iron in its construction.

Between 1805 and 1808 Wyatt remodelled West Dean House in West Dean, West Sussex. Wyatt's work was remarkable because it is built entirely of flint, even to the door and window openings, which would normally be lined with stone.

In 1776, Wyatt succeeded Henry Keene as Surveyor to Westminster Abbey (in which year he was appointed Elizabeth, Countess of Home's architect on Home House, though he was sacked and replaced by Robert Adam a year later). In 1782 he became, in addition, Architect of the Ordnance.[3] The death of Sir William Chambers brought him the post of Surveyor General and Comptroller of the Works in 1796.

 
Broadway Tower, Worcestershire, designed by Wyatt in the 1790s

Wyatt was now the principal architect of the day, the recipient of more commissions than he could well fulfil. His widespread practice and the duties of his official posts left him little time to give proper attention to the individual needs of his clients. As early as 1790, when he was invited to submit designs for rebuilding St Chad's Church at Shrewsbury, he broke his engagements with such frequency that the committee "became at length offended, and addressed themselves to Mr. George Stewart". In 1804, Jeffry Wyatt told Farington that his uncle had lost "many great commissions" by such neglect. When approached by a new client, he would at first take the keenest interest in the commission, but when the work was about to begin he would lose interest in it and "employ himself upon trifling professional matters which others could do". His conduct of official business was no better than his treatment of his private clients, and there can be no doubt that it was Wyatt's irresponsible habits which led to the reorganization of the Board of Works after his death, as a result of which the Surveyor's office was placed in the hands of a political chief assisted by three "attached architects".

 
The Senior Common Rooms and Senior Library of Oriel College, Oxford, designed by Wyatt in the 1780s

Wyatt was a brilliant but facile designer, whose work is not characterized by any markedly individual style. At the time he began practice the fashionable architects were the brothers Adam, whose style of interior decoration he proceeded to imitate with such success that they complained of plagiarism in the introduction to their Works in Architecture, which appeared in 1773. Many years later Wyatt himself told George III that "there had been no regular architecture since Sir William Chambers – that when he came from Italy he found the public taste corrupted by the Adams, and he was obliged to comply with it". Much of Wyatt's classical work is, in fact, in a chastened Adam manner with ornaments in Coade stone and Etruscan-style medallions executed in many cases by the painter Biagio Rebecca, who was also employed by his rivals. It was not until towards the end of his life that he and his brother Samuel (with whom must be associated their nephew Lewis) developed the severe and fastidious style of domestic architecture which is characteristic of the Wyatt manner at its best.[a] But among Wyatt's earlier works there are several (e.g., the Christ Church gateway and the mausoleum at Cobham) which show a familiarity with Chambers' Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture, and so permit the belief that if his artistic integrity had been greater Wyatt might have continued the Chambers tradition instead of falling in with the "corrupt taste" of the brothers Adam. Had he been given the opportunity of designing some great public building, it is possible that he would have shown himself a true disciple of Chambers;[b] but his career as a government architect coincided with the Napoleonic wars, and his premature death deprived him of participation in the metropolitan improvements of the reign of George IV.

Gothic architecture

 
Fonthill Abbey, built 1795–1807 by Wyatt for William Beckford, the author of the gothic fantasy novel 'Vathek'

Meanwhile, Wyatt's reputation as a rival to Robert Adam had been eclipsed by his celebrity as a Gothic architect. Every Georgian architect was called upon from time to time to produce designs in the medieval style, and Wyatt was by no means the first in the field. However, whereas his predecessors had merely Gothicized their elevations by the addition of battlements and pointed windows, Wyatt went further and exploited to the full the picturesque qualities of medieval architecture by irregular grouping and the addition of towers and spires to his silhouettes. Never, indeed, have the romantic possibilities of Gothic architecture been more strikingly demonstrated than they were by Wyatt at Fonthill Abbey and Ashridge; and although crude in scale and often unscholarly in detail, these houses are among the landmarks of the Gothic revival in England. In his lifetime Wyatt enjoyed the reputation of having "revived in this country the long forgotten beauties of Gothic architecture", but the real importance of his Gothic work lay in the manner in which it bridged the gap between the rococo Gothic of the mid 18th century and the serious medievalism of the early 19th century.

 
View in the Gallery, Fonthill: a coloured print from the elaborately-produced souvenir album commissioned by Beckford
 
Saint Michael's church, Hafod

Of his cathedral restorations, inspired as they were by the mistaken idea that a medieval church ought to be homogeneous in style and unencumbered by screens, monuments, and other obtrusive relics of the past, it can only be said that the Chapters who employed him were no more enlightened than their architect, and that at Westminster Abbey at least he accomplished an urgent work of repair in an unexceptionable manner. His activities at Salisbury, Durham, Hereford, and Lichfield were bitterly criticized by John Carter in his Pursuits of Architectural Innovation, and it was due in large measure to Carter's persistent denunciation that, in 1796, Wyatt failed to secure election as a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. In the following year, however, he was permitted to add F.S.A. to his name by a majority of one hundred and twenty-three votes.

Wyatt was elected to the Royal Academy in 1785, and took an active part in the politics of the Academy. In 1803 he was one of the members of the Council which attempted to assert its independence of the General Assembly of Academicians, and when the resultant dissensions led Benjamin West to resign the Presidency in the following year, it was Wyatt who was elected to take his place.[1] But his election was never formally approved by the King, and in the following year he appears to have acquiesced in West's resumption of office. Wyatt was one of the founders of the Architects' Club in 1791, and sometimes presided at its meetings at the Thatched House Tavern.

In 1802 Wyatt built a new house for the 7th Earl of Bridgewater on the Ashridge estate in Hertfordshire which is now a Grade I listed building. In 1803 Thomas Johnes hired Wyatt to design Saint Michel's Hafod Church, Eglwys Newydd, in Ceredigion, Wales.

Family and death

Wyatt died on 4 September 1813 as the result of an accident to the carriage in which he was travelling over the Marlborough Downs with his friend and employer, Christopher Bethell-Codrington of Dodington Park. He was buried in Westminster Abbey.

He left a widow and four sons, of whom the eldest, Benjamin Dean, and the youngest, Philip, were notable architects. Matthew Cotes (1777–1862), the second son, became a well-known sculptor, whose best work is the bronze statue of George III in Cockspur Street off Trafalgar Square. Charles, the third son, was for a time in the service of the East India Company at Calcutta, but returned to England in 1801; nothing is known of his later career.

Pupils and employees

He had many pupils, of whom the following is an incomplete list: William Atkinson; W. Blogg; H. Brown; Joseph Dixon (perhaps a son of the draughtsman); John Foster, junior of Liverpool; J. M. Gandy; C. Humfrey; Henry Kitchen; James Wright Sanderson; R. Smith; Thomas and John Westmacott; M. Wynn; and his sons Benjamin and Philip Wyatt. Michael Gandy and P. J. Gandy-Deering were also in his office for a time.

Wyatt's principal draughtsman was Joseph Dixon, who, according to Farington, had been with him from the time of the building of the Pantheon.

List of architectural works

Wyatt's known works include the following.[4]

Public buildings

Churches

London houses

  • 11–15 Portman Square, London, 1774
  • House, Grosvenor Square London, 1778-9
  • 9 Conduit Street, London, 1779
  • Richmond House, London, addition of two rooms and staircase 1782, burnt down 1791
  • 1 Foley Place, London, 1783, James Wyatt's own house, demolished 1925
  • Lichfield House, 15 St. James Square, London, alterations to the drawing room 1791-4
  • Montague House, 22 Portman Square, London, additions 1793, bombed in Blitz 1940
  • Queen's House (Buckingham Palace), London, alterations, rebuilt by John Nash 1825–1830
  • 22 St. James Square, London, 1803
  • Old Palace Kew, London, repairs 1802–11
  • New Palace Kew, London, 1802–11, never completed owing to George III's insanity, demolished 1827-8
  • Devonshire House, London, the crystal staircase 1811–12, demolished 1924
  • Carlton House, London, refitted library 1812, demolished

New country houses

Garden buildings and follies

Alterations to country houses

  • Fawley Court, Oxfordshire, internal alterations 1771
  • Cobham Hall, Kent, alterations and additions, 1771–81, 1789–93, 1801–12
  • Crichel House, Dorset, interior alterations 1773
  • Charlton Park, Wiltshire, alterations 1774
  • Aubery Hill, Notting Hill, London, alterations 1774
  • Shardeloes, Buckinghamshire, alterations to library, and garden buildings (demolished) 1774
  • Copped Hall, Essex redecoration of Library, burnt out in 1917
  • Milton Abbey, Dorset, interior decoration 1775-6
  • Belton House, Lincolnshire, Library & Boudoir 1776-7
  • Burton Constable Hall, Yorkshire, West Drawing Room & Entrance Lodges, 1776-8
  • Heveningham Hall, the interiors & orangery, plus the Rectory & Huntingfield Hall (a farm) 1776–84
  • Blagdon Hall, Northumberland, internal alterations 1778, Lodges to park 1787 & stables 1789–91
  • Ragley Hall, Warwickshire, alterations and interiors 1780
  • Sandleford Priory, Berkshire, alterations and additions 1780-6
  • Pishobury Park, Hertfordshire, reconstruction of an older house after a fire 1782-4
  • Plas Newydd, Anglesey, alterations & enlargements 1783–95 and 1811
  • Gunton Hall, Norfolk, enlargement 1785, partially demolished
  • Leinster House, Dublin, decoration of the gallery 1785
  • Cremore House, Chelsea, alterations 1785–1788, demolished
  • Goodwood House, Sussex, enlargements, kennels & dower house, 1787–1806
  • Powderham Castle, addition of music room 1788
  • Soho House, Birmingham, alterations, additions and interiors 1790s
  • Felbrigg Hall, Norfolk, alterations 1791–1804
  • Auckland Castle, County Durham, Gothic screen, inner gateway, processional route, Chapel, and Throne Room c.1795
  • Corsham Court, Wiltshire, alterations 1796
  • Cricket St Thomas, Somerset, alterations 1796–1800
  • Windsor Castle, Berkshire, alterations and interiors 1796–1800
  • Canwell Hall, Staffordshire, added wings and interiors, 1798, demolished 1911
  • Swinton Park, Yorkshire, North Wing 1798
  • Cassiobury House, Hertfordshire, alterations & additions 1799
  • Wilton House, Wiltshire, alterations 1801–11
  • Bulstrode Park, Buckinghamshire, 1807, rebuilt by Benjamin Ferrey 1862
  • Swinton Park, Yorkshire, south wing 1813
  • Chicksands Priory, Bedfordshire, alterations 1813–14
  • Draycot House Draycot Cerne, Wiltshire, design for a ceiling and bracket for a bust by Joseph Wilton 1784

Drawings

Few original drawings by Wyatt are known to be in existence: but in the RIBA library there are designs by him for Badger Hall, Fonthill Abbey, Downing College, and Ashridge Park. The Royal Academy has drawings for the mausoleums at Brocklesby Park and Cobham Hall.[1] An album of Wyatt's sketches, in the possession of the Vicomte de Noailles, contains designs for chandeliers, torchères, vases, etc., a plan for Lord Courtown, etc.[7] Those for Slane Castle are in the Murray Collection of the National Library of Ireland.

Portrayals

There is a portrait in the RIBA library, and a pencil portrait by George Dance is in the Library of the Royal Academy.[8] The National Portrait Gallery has a bronze bust of Wyatt by John Charles Felix Rossi.[9]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ For an admirable analysis of the mature "Wyatt manner", see Arthur Oswald article on "Rudding Hall, Yorks"., in Country Life, 4 February 1949. The architect of Rudding itself is unknown.
  2. ^ The influence of Somerset House is, in fact, apparent in Wyatt's rejected design for Downing College, Cambridge, of c. 1800 (see Gavin Walkley, "A Recently Found James Wyatt Design", R.I.B.A. Jnl., 12 September, and 17 October 1938).

References

  • Colvin, H.M. (1954): A Biographical Dictionary of English Architects, 1660–1840, Harvard, pp. 722 and onwards. OCLC 2172754
  • Saint, A., Guillery, P. (eds.) (2012): Woolwich – Survey of London, Volume 48, Yale Books, London. ISBN 9780300187229 (online text)
  1. ^ a b c d "James Wyatt PRA (1746 – 1813)". Royal Academy of Arts. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  2. ^ a b Bingham, Neil, (2011) page 46 Masterworks: Architecture at the Royal Academy of Arts, Royal Academy of Arts, ISBN 978-1-905711-83-3
  3. ^ Saint & Guillery (2012), p. 148.
  4. ^ Anthony Dale, James Wyatt, pg. 210–217, 2nd edition 1956, Blackwell
  5. ^ "Former Officers' Mess, Fenham Barracks, Newcastle upon Tyne". British listed buildings. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  6. ^ Pelham Mausoleum
  7. ^ Country Life, 5 December 1947 and 2 July 1948
  8. ^ "Portrait of James Wyatt, P.R.A. | RA Collection". Royal Academy of Arts. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  9. ^ "James Wyatt". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 3 November 2020.

External links

  • "Wyatt, James" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Wyatt, James" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • James Wyatt's biography at Beckfordiana, the website for resources on the life and work of William Beckford of Fonthill.
  • James Wyatt & the Palace of Westminster - UK Parliament Living Heritage
Court offices
Preceded by Surveyor-General and Comptroller
1796–1813
Succeeded by
(post discontinued)
Cultural offices
Preceded by President of the Royal Academy
1805–1806
Succeeded by

james, wyatt, other, people, named, disambiguation, august, 1746, september, 1813, english, architect, rival, robert, adam, neoclassical, gothic, styles, elected, royal, academy, 1785, president, from, 1805, 1806, mezzotint, after, portrait, wyatt, matthew, co. For other people named James Wyatt see James Wyatt disambiguation James Wyatt PRA 3 August 1746 4 September 1813 was an English architect a rival of Robert Adam in the neoclassical and neo Gothic styles He was elected to the Royal Academy in 1785 and was its president from 1805 to 1806 James WyattMezzotint after a portrait by Wyatt s son Matthew Cotes WyattBorn 1746 08 03 3 August 1746Blackbrook Farm Weeford Staffordshire EnglandDied4 September 1813 1813 09 04 aged 67 2 miles east of Marlborough in carriage accidentNationalityEnglishOccupationArchitectSpouseRachel LunnChildren4 sons including Benjamin Dean Matthew Cotes PhilipBuildingsFonthill Abbey Contents 1 Early life 2 Early classical career 3 Later classical work 4 Gothic architecture 5 Family and death 6 Pupils and employees 7 List of architectural works 7 1 Public buildings 7 2 Churches 7 3 London houses 7 4 New country houses 7 5 Garden buildings and follies 7 6 Alterations to country houses 7 7 Drawings 8 Portrayals 9 See also 10 Footnotes 11 References 12 External linksEarly life EditWyatt was born on 3 August 1746 at Weeford near Lichfield Staffordshire England 1 Early classical career EditWyatt spent six years in Italy 1762 68 in company with Richard Bagot of Staffordshire who was Secretary to the Earl of Northampton s embassy to the Venetian Republic In Venice Wyatt studied with Antonio Visentini 1688 1782 as an architectural draughtsman and painter In Rome he made measured drawings of the dome of St Peter s Basilica being under the necessity of lying on his back on a ladder slung horizontally without cradle or side rail over a frightful void of 300 feet Back in England his selection as architect of the proposed Pantheon or Winter Ranelagh in Oxford Street London brought him almost unparalleled instant success His brother Samuel was one of the principal promoters of the scheme and it was doubtless due to him that the designs of a young and almost unknown architect were accepted by the committee When the Pantheon was opened in 1772 their choice was at once endorsed by the fashionable public Horace Walpole pronounced it to be the most beautiful edifice in England Wyatt s Pantheon in Oxford Street London Externally it was unremarkable but the classicising domed hall surrounded by galleried aisles and apsidal ends was something new in assembly rooms and brought its architect immediate celebrity The design was exhibited at the Royal Academy private commissions followed and at the age of 26 Wyatt found himself a fashionable domestic architect and on 27 August 1770 an Associate of the Royal Academy 2 His polished manners secured him friends as well as patrons among the great and when it was rumoured that he was about to leave the country to become architect to Catherine II of Russia a group of English noblemen is said to have offered him a retaining fee of 1 200 to remain in their service His major neoclassical country houses include Heaton Hall near Manchester 1772 Heveningham Hall in Suffolk circa 1788 99 and Castle Coole in Ireland as well as Packington Hall in Staffordshire the home of the Levett family for generations and Dodington Park in Gloucestershire for the Codrington family On 15 February 1785 Wyatt was elected an Academician of the Royal Academy 1 his diploma work being a drawing of the Darnley Mausoleum 2 Later classical work EditIn later years he carried out alterations at Frogmore for Queen Charlotte and was made Surveyor General of the Works In about 1800 he was commissioned to carry out alterations to Windsor Castle which would probably have been much more considerable had it not been for the King s illness and in 1802 he designed for the King the strange castellated palace at Kew which was remarkable for the extensive employment of cast iron in its construction Between 1805 and 1808 Wyatt remodelled West Dean House in West Dean West Sussex Wyatt s work was remarkable because it is built entirely of flint even to the door and window openings which would normally be lined with stone In 1776 Wyatt succeeded Henry Keene as Surveyor to Westminster Abbey in which year he was appointed Elizabeth Countess of Home s architect on Home House though he was sacked and replaced by Robert Adam a year later In 1782 he became in addition Architect of the Ordnance 3 The death of Sir William Chambers brought him the post of Surveyor General and Comptroller of the Works in 1796 Broadway Tower Worcestershire designed by Wyatt in the 1790s Wyatt was now the principal architect of the day the recipient of more commissions than he could well fulfil His widespread practice and the duties of his official posts left him little time to give proper attention to the individual needs of his clients As early as 1790 when he was invited to submit designs for rebuilding St Chad s Church at Shrewsbury he broke his engagements with such frequency that the committee became at length offended and addressed themselves to Mr George Stewart In 1804 Jeffry Wyatt told Farington that his uncle had lost many great commissions by such neglect When approached by a new client he would at first take the keenest interest in the commission but when the work was about to begin he would lose interest in it and employ himself upon trifling professional matters which others could do His conduct of official business was no better than his treatment of his private clients and there can be no doubt that it was Wyatt s irresponsible habits which led to the reorganization of the Board of Works after his death as a result of which the Surveyor s office was placed in the hands of a political chief assisted by three attached architects The Senior Common Rooms and Senior Library of Oriel College Oxford designed by Wyatt in the 1780s Wyatt was a brilliant but facile designer whose work is not characterized by any markedly individual style At the time he began practice the fashionable architects were the brothers Adam whose style of interior decoration he proceeded to imitate with such success that they complained of plagiarism in the introduction to their Works in Architecture which appeared in 1773 Many years later Wyatt himself told George III that there had been no regular architecture since Sir William Chambers that when he came from Italy he found the public taste corrupted by the Adams and he was obliged to comply with it Much of Wyatt s classical work is in fact in a chastened Adam manner with ornaments in Coade stone and Etruscan style medallions executed in many cases by the painter Biagio Rebecca who was also employed by his rivals It was not until towards the end of his life that he and his brother Samuel with whom must be associated their nephew Lewis developed the severe and fastidious style of domestic architecture which is characteristic of the Wyatt manner at its best a But among Wyatt s earlier works there are several e g the Christ Church gateway and the mausoleum at Cobham which show a familiarity with Chambers Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture and so permit the belief that if his artistic integrity had been greater Wyatt might have continued the Chambers tradition instead of falling in with the corrupt taste of the brothers Adam Had he been given the opportunity of designing some great public building it is possible that he would have shown himself a true disciple of Chambers b but his career as a government architect coincided with the Napoleonic wars and his premature death deprived him of participation in the metropolitan improvements of the reign of George IV Gothic architecture Edit Fonthill Abbey built 1795 1807 by Wyatt for William Beckford the author of the gothic fantasy novel Vathek Meanwhile Wyatt s reputation as a rival to Robert Adam had been eclipsed by his celebrity as a Gothic architect Every Georgian architect was called upon from time to time to produce designs in the medieval style and Wyatt was by no means the first in the field However whereas his predecessors had merely Gothicized their elevations by the addition of battlements and pointed windows Wyatt went further and exploited to the full the picturesque qualities of medieval architecture by irregular grouping and the addition of towers and spires to his silhouettes Never indeed have the romantic possibilities of Gothic architecture been more strikingly demonstrated than they were by Wyatt at Fonthill Abbey and Ashridge and although crude in scale and often unscholarly in detail these houses are among the landmarks of the Gothic revival in England In his lifetime Wyatt enjoyed the reputation of having revived in this country the long forgotten beauties of Gothic architecture but the real importance of his Gothic work lay in the manner in which it bridged the gap between the rococo Gothic of the mid 18th century and the serious medievalism of the early 19th century View in the Gallery Fonthill a coloured print from the elaborately produced souvenir album commissioned by Beckford Saint Michael s church Hafod Of his cathedral restorations inspired as they were by the mistaken idea that a medieval church ought to be homogeneous in style and unencumbered by screens monuments and other obtrusive relics of the past it can only be said that the Chapters who employed him were no more enlightened than their architect and that at Westminster Abbey at least he accomplished an urgent work of repair in an unexceptionable manner His activities at Salisbury Durham Hereford and Lichfield were bitterly criticized by John Carter in his Pursuits of Architectural Innovation and it was due in large measure to Carter s persistent denunciation that in 1796 Wyatt failed to secure election as a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries In the following year however he was permitted to add F S A to his name by a majority of one hundred and twenty three votes Wyatt was elected to the Royal Academy in 1785 and took an active part in the politics of the Academy In 1803 he was one of the members of the Council which attempted to assert its independence of the General Assembly of Academicians and when the resultant dissensions led Benjamin West to resign the Presidency in the following year it was Wyatt who was elected to take his place 1 But his election was never formally approved by the King and in the following year he appears to have acquiesced in West s resumption of office Wyatt was one of the founders of the Architects Club in 1791 and sometimes presided at its meetings at the Thatched House Tavern In 1802 Wyatt built a new house for the 7th Earl of Bridgewater on the Ashridge estate in Hertfordshire which is now a Grade I listed building In 1803 Thomas Johnes hired Wyatt to design Saint Michel s Hafod Church Eglwys Newydd in Ceredigion Wales Family and death EditWyatt died on 4 September 1813 as the result of an accident to the carriage in which he was travelling over the Marlborough Downs with his friend and employer Christopher Bethell Codrington of Dodington Park He was buried in Westminster Abbey He left a widow and four sons of whom the eldest Benjamin Dean and the youngest Philip were notable architects Matthew Cotes 1777 1862 the second son became a well known sculptor whose best work is the bronze statue of George III in Cockspur Street off Trafalgar Square Charles the third son was for a time in the service of the East India Company at Calcutta but returned to England in 1801 nothing is known of his later career Pupils and employees EditHe had many pupils of whom the following is an incomplete list William Atkinson W Blogg H Brown Joseph Dixon perhaps a son of the draughtsman John Foster junior of Liverpool J M Gandy C Humfrey Henry Kitchen James Wright Sanderson R Smith Thomas and John Westmacott M Wynn and his sons Benjamin and Philip Wyatt Michael Gandy and P J Gandy Deering were also in his office for a time Wyatt s principal draughtsman was Joseph Dixon who according to Farington had been with him from the time of the building of the Pantheon List of architectural works EditWyatt s known works include the following 4 Public buildings Edit The Pantheon Oxford St London 1770 1772 demolished 1937 Christ Church Oxford north and east sides of the Canterbury Quad including the gate 1773 83 Radcliffe Observatory Oxford 1776 94 Brasenose College Oxford redecorated the Library 1779 80 Holywell Music Room Oxford remodelled interior 1780 The Assembly Rooms Chichester Sussex 1783 Worcester College Oxford interiors of the chapel and hall 1783 the chapel was redecorated by William Burges Royal Arsenal Woolwich various buildings for the Board of Ordnance 1783 1807 Oriel College Oxford the library and alterations to the provost s rooms 1788 91 Liverpool Town Hall interiors 1783 1813 New College Oxford alterations to the Hall Chapel amp Library 1789 94 Merton College Oxford rebuilt Hall 1790 1794 again rebuilt by Sir George Gilbert Scott 1872 4 Lincoln s Inn London repairs to the chapel roof 1791 Balliol College Oxford rebuilt hall and redecorated the library 1792 Magdalen College Oxford alterations to the hall and chapel 1792 5 Royal Military Academy Woolwich 1796 1805 Royal Artillery Barracks Woolwich 1796 7 Palace of Westminster restoration of the House of Lords 1800 1813 burnt 1834 Ripon Town Hall Yorkshire 1801 The King s Bench Prison London restoration and alterations 1803 1804 demolished The Marshalsea Prison London restoration and alterations 1803 1805 demolished Fenham Barracks Newcastle upon Tyne 1804 1806 5 The Naval Arsenal Great Yarmouth Norfolk 1806 demolished 1829 The Armoury Shrewsbury 1806 The Royal Military College Sandhurst Berkshire 1807 12 executed by John Sanders who modified the design most notably using Greek Doric for the portico Dorset House Whitehall London adaptation as government offices 1808 demolished The Market Cross Devizes Wiltshire 1814 Pantheon Oxford St Entrance Facade Pantheon Oxford St interior Oriel College Library Oxford interior Former Radcliffe Observatory Oxford Staircase Liverpool Town Hall Large Ballroom Liverpool Town Hall Small Ballroom Liverpool Town Hall Central Reception Room Liverpool Town Hall Detail Dining Room Liverpool Town Hall the Royal Artillery Barracks Woolwich Ripon Town Hall The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst The Grand Store Royal Arsenal Woolwich Main Guardhouses Royal Arsenal Woolwich Royal Artillery South West Gatehouse WoolwichChurches Edit St James Church in the planned community of Milton Abbas Dorset 1774 86 St George s Chapel Windsor Castle alterations 1787 1790 Salisbury Cathedral restoration work 1787 93 St Peter s Church Manchester 1788 94 demolished Lichfield Cathedral restoration 1788 95 Hereford Cathedral restoration 1788 97 Milton Abbey Dorset restored Abbey church 1789 91 East Grinstead Church Sussex 1789 1813 Durham Cathedral restoration 1795 6 St Kea Church Cornwall 1802 demolished 1895 Westminster Abbey London restoration work 1803 Hafod Church Caernarvonshire 1803 burnt down 1931 Weeford Church Staffordshire 1803 Henry VII Lady Chapel Westminster Abbey restoration 1807 13 Hanworth Church Middlesex 1808 13 rebuilt 1865 St Swithun s Church East Grinstead St Mary s WeefordLondon houses Edit 11 15 Portman Square London 1774 House Grosvenor Square London 1778 9 9 Conduit Street London 1779 Richmond House London addition of two rooms and staircase 1782 burnt down 1791 1 Foley Place London 1783 James Wyatt s own house demolished 1925 Lichfield House 15 St James Square London alterations to the drawing room 1791 4 Montague House 22 Portman Square London additions 1793 bombed in Blitz 1940 Queen s House Buckingham Palace London alterations rebuilt by John Nash 1825 1830 22 St James Square London 1803 Old Palace Kew London repairs 1802 11 New Palace Kew London 1802 11 never completed owing to George III s insanity demolished 1827 8 Devonshire House London the crystal staircase 1811 12 demolished 1924 Carlton House London refitted library 1812 demolishedNew country houses Edit Abbeyleix House Co Laois Ireland 1773 Gaddesden Place Hertfordshire 1768 73 Heaton Hall Lancashire 1772 Sheffield Park Sussex 1776 Farnham House Cavan c 1777 extended by Francis Johnston c 1800 Grove House Roehampton 1777 Bryanston House Dorset 1778 rebuilt by Richard Norman Shaw 1890 Hothfield Place Kent 1778 80 demolished 1954 Badger Hall Shropshire 1779 1783 demolished 1952 Roundway House Wiltshire 1780 Fornham Hall Suffolk 1781 1782 demolished 1951 Lee Priory Kent 1782 1790 demolished 1954 a room survives in the V amp A Museum New Park Roundway Devizes Wiltshire 1783 demolished 1955 Sudbourne Hall Suffolk 1784 later extended and remodelled Sunningdale Park Berkshire 1785 rebuilt Wynnstay House Denbighshire 1785 1788 rebuilt in the 19th century Stanstead Park Sussex 1786 1791 rebuilt in 1900 Sufton Court Herefordshire 1788 Ammerdown House Kilmersdon Somerset 1788 Gresford House Denbighshire c 1790 Hartham Park Wiltshire 1790 1795 Castle Coole County Fermanagh 1790 1798 Frogmore House Berkshire 1792 Sundridge Park Kent 1792 1795 finished by John Nash Henham Hall Suffolk 1793 1797 demolished 1953 Purley Park Berkshire 1795 Bowden House Bowden Hill Wiltshire 1796 Fonthill Abbey Wiltshire 1796 1813 Trentham Hall Staffordshire 1797 remodelled by Sir Charles Barry demolished c 1909 Stoke Poges Park Buckinghamshire 1797 1802 Wycombe Abbey Buckinghamshire c 1798 Dodington Park Gloucestershire 1798 1808 Norris Castle Isle of Wight 1799 Pennsylvania Castle Dorset 1800 Cranbourne Lodge Windsor great Park 1800 demolished 1830 Nacton House Suffolk 1801 Belvoir Castle Leicestershire 1801 1813 work continued under Rev T Thornton after Wyatt s death West Dean Park Sussex 1804 enlarged 1893 Ashridge Hertfordshire 1808 1813 completed by his nephew Sir Jeffry Wyatville after Wyatt s death House at Streatham Surrey 1810 Elvaston Castle Derbyshire 1812 Heaton Hall Bath Lodge Dodington Park Frogmore House Stoke Poges Park Cross Section Fonthill Abbey Hall Fonthill Abbey St michael s gallery Fonthill Abbey King Edward s gallery Fonthill Abbey Norris Castle Isle of Wight Belvoir Castle south front Castle Coole Enniskillen Castle Coole Enniskillen Castle Coole Enniskillen Gaddesden Place Elvaston Castle Hartham Park Grove House Roehampton Entrance front Ashridge Garden front Ashridge Ashridge HouseGarden buildings and follies Edit Folly Temple Island 1771 Bridge Chiswick House attributed 1774 Cobham Hall Kent Darnley Mausoleum 1783 Brocklesby Park Lincolnshire the Mausoleum 1787 94 6 Broadway Tower an isolated folly for Lady Coventry 1794 Peper Harrow Surrey a conservatory 1797 demolished c 1913 Croome Park Worcestershire various garden buildings including the Panorama Tower 1801 Darnley Mausoleum Cobham Kent Panorama Tower Croome Park Folly Temple Island Broadway tower Bridge Chiswick HouseAlterations to country houses Edit Fawley Court Oxfordshire internal alterations 1771 Cobham Hall Kent alterations and additions 1771 81 1789 93 1801 12 Crichel House Dorset interior alterations 1773 Charlton Park Wiltshire alterations 1774 Aubery Hill Notting Hill London alterations 1774 Shardeloes Buckinghamshire alterations to library and garden buildings demolished 1774 Copped Hall Essex redecoration of Library burnt out in 1917 Milton Abbey Dorset interior decoration 1775 6 Belton House Lincolnshire Library amp Boudoir 1776 7 Burton Constable Hall Yorkshire West Drawing Room amp Entrance Lodges 1776 8 Heveningham Hall the interiors amp orangery plus the Rectory amp Huntingfield Hall a farm 1776 84 Blagdon Hall Northumberland internal alterations 1778 Lodges to park 1787 amp stables 1789 91 Ragley Hall Warwickshire alterations and interiors 1780 Sandleford Priory Berkshire alterations and additions 1780 6 Pishobury Park Hertfordshire reconstruction of an older house after a fire 1782 4 Plas Newydd Anglesey alterations amp enlargements 1783 95 and 1811 Gunton Hall Norfolk enlargement 1785 partially demolished Leinster House Dublin decoration of the gallery 1785 Cremore House Chelsea alterations 1785 1788 demolished Goodwood House Sussex enlargements kennels amp dower house 1787 1806 Powderham Castle addition of music room 1788 Soho House Birmingham alterations additions and interiors 1790s Felbrigg Hall Norfolk alterations 1791 1804 Auckland Castle County Durham Gothic screen inner gateway processional route Chapel and Throne Room c 1795 Corsham Court Wiltshire alterations 1796 Cricket St Thomas Somerset alterations 1796 1800 Windsor Castle Berkshire alterations and interiors 1796 1800 Canwell Hall Staffordshire added wings and interiors 1798 demolished 1911 Swinton Park Yorkshire North Wing 1798 Cassiobury House Hertfordshire alterations amp additions 1799 Wilton House Wiltshire alterations 1801 11 Bulstrode Park Buckinghamshire 1807 rebuilt by Benjamin Ferrey 1862 Swinton Park Yorkshire south wing 1813 Chicksands Priory Bedfordshire alterations 1813 14 Draycot House Draycot Cerne Wiltshire design for a ceiling and bracket for a bust by Joseph Wilton 1784 Goodwood House Powderham Castle Music Room Powderham Castle Music Room Ragley Hall with portico added 1780 by Wyatt Auckland Castle County DurhamDrawings Edit Few original drawings by Wyatt are known to be in existence but in the RIBA library there are designs by him for Badger Hall Fonthill Abbey Downing College and Ashridge Park The Royal Academy has drawings for the mausoleums at Brocklesby Park and Cobham Hall 1 An album of Wyatt s sketches in the possession of the Vicomte de Noailles contains designs for chandeliers torcheres vases etc a plan for Lord Courtown etc 7 Those for Slane Castle are in the Murray Collection of the National Library of Ireland Portrayals EditThere is a portrait in the RIBA library and a pencil portrait by George Dance is in the Library of the Royal Academy 8 The National Portrait Gallery has a bronze bust of Wyatt by John Charles Felix Rossi 9 See also EditWyatt familyFootnotes Edit For an admirable analysis of the mature Wyatt manner see Arthur Oswald article on Rudding Hall Yorks in Country Life 4 February 1949 The architect of Rudding itself is unknown The influence of Somerset House is in fact apparent in Wyatt s rejected design for Downing College Cambridge of c 1800 see Gavin Walkley A Recently Found James Wyatt Design R I B A Jnl 12 September and 17 October 1938 References EditColvin H M 1954 A Biographical Dictionary of English Architects 1660 1840 Harvard pp 722 and onwards OCLC 2172754 Saint A Guillery P eds 2012 Woolwich Survey of London Volume 48 Yale Books London ISBN 9780300187229 online text a b c d James Wyatt PRA 1746 1813 Royal Academy of Arts Retrieved 3 November 2020 a b Bingham Neil 2011 page 46 Masterworks Architecture at the Royal Academy of Arts Royal Academy of Arts ISBN 978 1 905711 83 3 Saint amp Guillery 2012 p 148 Anthony Dale James Wyatt pg 210 217 2nd edition 1956 Blackwell Former Officers Mess Fenham Barracks Newcastle upon Tyne British listed buildings Retrieved 17 November 2015 Pelham Mausoleum Country Life 5 December 1947 and 2 July 1948 Portrait of James Wyatt P R A RA Collection Royal Academy of Arts Retrieved 3 November 2020 James Wyatt National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 3 November 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Wyatt Wyatt James Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Wyatt James Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press James Wyatt s biography at Beckfordiana the website for resources on the life and work of William Beckford of Fonthill James Wyatt amp the Palace of Westminster UK Parliament Living Heritage Packington Hall Home of Rev Thomas Levett Whittington Staffordshire ca 1900Court officesPreceded byWilliam Chambers Surveyor General and Comptroller1796 1813 Succeeded by post discontinued Cultural officesPreceded byBenjamin West President of the Royal Academy1805 1806 Succeeded byBenjamin West Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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