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Robert Adam

Robert Adam FRSE FRS FSAScot FSA FRSA (3 July 1728 – 3 March 1792) was a British neoclassical architect, interior designer and furniture designer. He was the son of William Adam (1689–1748), Scotland's foremost architect of the time, and trained under him. With his older brother John, Robert took on the family business, which included lucrative work for the Board of Ordnance, after William's death.

Robert Adam

Portrait attributed to George Willison, c. 1770–1775
Born(1728-07-03)3 July 1728
Died3 March 1792(1792-03-03) (aged 63)
Burial placeWestminster Abbey
NationalityBritish
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
StyleNeoclassical
Parent
Relatives
OccupationArchitect
PracticeAdam Brothers (Edinburgh, London)
BuildingsSyon House
Culzean Castle
Kedleston Hall
Pulteney Bridge
Harewood House
Charlotte Square
Robert Adam by James Tassie (medallion)

In 1754, he left for Rome, spending nearly five years on the continent studying architecture under Charles-Louis Clérisseau and Giovanni Battista Piranesi. On his return to Britain he established a practice in London, where he was joined by his younger brother James. Here he developed the "Adam Style", and his theory of "movement" in architecture, based on his studies of antiquity and became one of the most successful and fashionable architects in the country. Adam held the post of Architect of the King's Works from 1761 to 1769.

Robert Adam was a leader of the first phase of the classical revival in England and Scotland from around 1760 until his death.[2] He influenced the development of Western architecture, both in Europe and in North America. Adam designed interiors and fittings as well as houses.[3] Much of his work consisted of remodelling existing houses, as well as contributions to Edinburgh's townscape and designing romantic pseudo-mediaeval country houses in Scotland.[4]

He served as the member of Parliament for Kinross-shire from 1768 to 1774.[5]

Biography edit

Early life edit

 
Royal High School (1578–1777) on site of Blackfriars Monastery, Edinburgh.

Adam was born on 3 July 1728 at Gladney House in Kirkcaldy, Fife, the second son of Mary Robertson (1699–1761), the daughter of William Robertson of Gladney, and architect William Adam.[1][6] As a child he was noted as having a "feeble constitution".[7] From 1734 at the age of six Adam attended the Royal High School, Edinburgh[8] where he learned Latin (from the second year lessons were conducted in Latin)[9] until he was 15, he was taught to read works by Virgil, Horace, Sallust and parts of Cicero and in his final year Livy.[9]

In autumn 1743, he matriculated at the University of Edinburgh,[10] and compulsory classes for all students were: the Greek language, logic, metaphysics and natural philosophy.[10] Students could choose three elective subjects, Adam attended classes in mathematics, taught by Colin Maclaurin, and anatomy, taught by Alexander Monro primus.[11] His studies were interrupted by the arrival of Bonnie Prince Charlie and his Highlanders, who occupied Edinburgh during the 1745 Jacobite rising. At the end of the year, Robert fell seriously ill for some months, and it seems unlikely that he returned to university, having completed only two years of study.[12]

On his recovery from illness in 1746, he joined his elder brother John as apprentice to his father. He assisted William Adam on projects such as the building of Inveraray Castle and the continuing extensions of Hopetoun House. William's position as Master Mason to the Board of Ordnance also began to generate much work, as the Highlands were fortified following the failed Jacobite revolt. Robert's early ambition was to be an artist rather than architect, and the style of his early sketches in the manner of Salvator Rosa are reflected in his earliest surviving architectural drawings, which show picturesque gothic follies.[13] William Adam died in June 1748, and left Dowhill, a part of the Blair Adam estate which included Dowhill Castle, to Robert. From his father, Robert inherited an extensive library and extended it.[14]

Architectural practice in Edinburgh edit

 
Entrance front of Hopetoun House, designed by William Adam and modified by the Adam Brothers

On William Adam's death, John Adam inherited both the family business and the position of Master Mason to the Board of Ordnance. He immediately took Robert into partnership, later to be joined by James Adam. The Adam Brothers' first major commission was the decoration of the grand state apartments on the first floor at Hopetoun House, followed by their first "new build" at Dumfries House. For the Board of Ordnance, the brothers were the main contractor at Fort George, a large modern fort near Inverness designed by military engineer Colonel Skinner. Visits to this project, begun in 1750, would occupy the brothers every summer for the next 10 years, and, along with works at many other barracks and forts, provided Robert with a solid foundation in practical building.[15]

In the winter of 1749–1750, Adam travelled to London with his friend, the poet John Home. He took the opportunity for architectural study, visiting Wilton, designed by Inigo Jones, and the Queens Hermitage in Richmond by Roger Morris. His sketchbook of the trip also shows a continuing interest in gothic architecture.[16]

Among his friends at Edinburgh were the philosophers Adam Ferguson and David Hume and the artist Paul Sandby whom he met in the Highlands. Other Edinburgh acquaintances included Gilbert Elliot, William Wilkie, John Home and Alexander Wedderburn.[13]

Grand Tour edit

 
Plan of the Diocletian palace in Split, Croatia. R. Adam 1764
 
Peristyle of the Diocletian palace in Split, Croatia. R. Adam 1764

On 3 October 1754, Robert Adam in the company of his brother James (who went as far as Brussels) set off from Edinburgh for his Grand Tour, stopping for a few days in London, where they visited the Mansion House, London, St Stephen Walbrook,[17] St Paul's Cathedral, Windsor, Berkshire, in the company of Thomas Sandby who showed them his landscaping at Windsor Great Park and Virginia Water Lake.[18] They sailed from Dover arriving in Calais[19] on 28 October 1754.[20] He joined Charles Hope-Weir, brother of the Earl of Hopetoun in Brussels[21] and together they travelled to Rome.[22] Hope agreed to take Adam on the tour at the suggestion of his uncle, the Marquess of Annandale, who had undertaken the Grand Tour himself. While in Brussels the pair attended a Play and Masquerade, as well as visiting churches and palaces in the city.[23] Travelling on to Tournai, then Lille, where they visited the citadel designed by Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban.[24] By 12 November 1754 Adam and Hope were in Paris where they took lodgings in Hotel de Notre Dame.[25]

Adam and Hope travelled on to Italy together, before falling out in Rome over travelling expenses and accommodation. Robert Adam stayed on in Rome until 1757, studying classical architecture and honing his drawing skills. His tutors included the French architect and artist Charles-Louis Clérisseau, and the Italian artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Here, he became acquainted with the work of the pioneering classical archaeologist and art historian, theorist Johann Joachim Winckelmann. On his return journey, Adam and Clerisseau spent time intensively studying the ruins of Diocletian's Palace at Spalatro in Dalmatia (now known as Split, in modern Croatia).[26] These studies were later published as Ruins of the Palace of the Emperor Diocletian at Spalatro in Dalmatia in 1764.

Architectural practice in London edit

 
Admiralty Screen 1759–61, Whitehall, London, one of Adam's first executed buildings after his grand tour
 
Kedleston Hall in Derbyshire. The south front by Robert Adam, based on the Arch of Constantine in Rome

He returned to Britain in 1758 and set up in business in London with his brother James Adam. They focused on designing complete schemes for the decoration and furnishing of houses. Palladian design was popular, and Robert designed a number of country houses in this style,[27] but he evolved a new, more flexible style incorporating elements of classical Roman design alongside influences from Greek, Byzantine and Baroque styles.[28] The Adam brothers' success can also be attributed to a desire to design everything down to the smallest detail, ensuring a sense of unity in their design. In Adam interiors, all the furnishings were custom designed to accord with the decoration of the room in a unified harmony. Often the carpets were woven to match the intricate patterns of the ceiling above, while every fitting including sconces, mirrors, and doorknobs also received a custom design emulating the motifs of the room.[29][30]

Adams' practice was not without mishap, however. In 1768 the Adam brothers purchased a 99-year lease for a marshy plot of land beside the Thames in Westminster, where they built a 24-house terrace development known as the Adelphi.[29] The project was very ambitious and is the first instance where terraced houses were designed individually to give unified harmony to the whole development (previously terraced houses were built to one replicated design side-by-side, around a square).[29] However, the project became a white elephant for Robert and his brothers, with uncertain financing and costs spiralling out of control. The houses were built on a huge artificial terrace resting on vaulted substructures on the level of the Thames, which Robert Adam was certain could be leased to the British government as warehouses. However, this interest failed to materialize, and the Adam brothers were left with huge debts and in 1772 had to lay off 3,000 workmen and cease building. Adam himself moved into one of the houses in the Adelphi, along with supportive friends like David Garrick and Josiah Wedgewood, who opened a showroom for his ceramics in one of the houses. In 1774, a public lottery was held to raise funds for the brothers, which allowed them to avert bankruptcy.[29]

Public life edit

 
One of Adam's masterpieces: Pulteney Bridge, Bath

Adam was elected a fellow of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce in 1758 and of the Society of Antiquaries in 1761, the same year he was appointed Architect of the King's Works (jointly with Sir William Chambers). His younger brother James succeeded him in this post when he relinquished the role in 1768 to devote more time to his elected office as member of Parliament for Kinross-shire.

Architectural style edit

Adam rejected the Palladian style, as introduced to England by Inigo Jones, and advocated by Lord Burlington, as "ponderous" and "disgustful".[31] However, he continued their tradition of drawing inspiration directly from classical antiquity, during his four-year stay in Europe.[31] Adam developed a new style of architectural decoration, one which was more archaeologically accurate than past Neoclassical styles, but nonetheless innovative and not bound only by ancient precedents. In Works in Architecture, co-authored with his brother James, the brothers stated that Graeco-Roman examples should "serve as models which we should imitate, and as standards by which we ought to judge."[29] The discoveries in Herculaneum and Pompeii ongoing at the time provided ample material for Robert Adam to draw on for inspiration.[29]

The Adam brothers' principle of "movement" was largely Robert's conception, although the theory was first written down by James. "Movement" relied on dramatic contrasts and diversity of form, and drew on the picturesque aesthetic. The first volume of the Adam brother's Works (1773) cited Kedleston Hall, designed by Robert in 1761, as an outstanding example of movement in architecture.

By contrasting room sizes and decorative schemes, Adam applied the concept of movement to his interiors also. His style of decoration, described by Pevsner as "Classical Rococo", drew on Roman "grotesque" stucco decoration.[31][32]

Influence edit

 
Adam designed bookcase 1776, probably built by Thomas Chippendale

Adam's work had influenced the direction of architecture and design across the western world. In England his collaboration with Thomas Chippendale resulted in some of the finest neoclassicist designs of the time, most notably in the Harewood House collection of Chippendale's work. In North America, the Federal style owes much to neoclassicism as practised by Adam. In Europe, Adam notably influenced Charles Cameron, the Scotsman who designed Tsarskoye Selo and other Russian palaces for Catherine the Great.[33] However, by the time of his death, Adam's neoclassicism was being superseded in Britain by a more severe, Greek phase of the classical revival, as practised by James "Athenian" Stuart. The Adam brothers employed several draughtsmen who would go on to establish themselves as architects, including George Richardson, and the Italian Joseph Bonomi, who Robert originally hired in Rome.

Written works edit

During their lifetime Robert and James Adam published two volumes of their designs, Works in Architecture of Robert and James Adam (in 1773–1778 and 1779; a third volume was published posthumously, in 1822).

Death and burial edit

Adam had long suffered from stomach and bowel problems,[34] probably caused by a peptic ulcer and irritable bowel syndrome. While at home – 11 Albemarle Street, London – on 1 March 1792, one of the ulcers burst, and on 3 March Adam died.[34]

The funeral was held on 10 March; he was buried in the south aisle of Westminster Abbey.[34] The pall-bearers were several of his clients: Henry Scott, 3rd Duke of Buccleuch; George Coventry, 6th Earl of Coventry; James Maitland, 8th Earl of Lauderdale; David Murray, 2nd Earl of Mansfield; Lord Frederick Campbell and Sir William Pulteney, 5th Baronet.[34]

Knowing he was dying, he drafted his will on 2 March 1792. Having never married, Adam left his estate to his sisters Elizabeth Adam and Margaret Adam.[34]

His obituary appeared in the March 1792 edition of The Gentleman's Magazine:[35]

It is somewhat remarkable that the Arts should be deprived at the same time of two of their greatest ornaments, Sir Joshua Reynolds and Mr Adam: and it is difficult to say which of them excelled most in his particular profession... Mr Adam produced a total change in the architecture of this country: and his fertile genius in elegant ornament was not confined to the decoration of buildings, but has been diffused to every branch of manufacture. His talents extend beyond the lie of his own profession: he displayed in his numerous drawings in landscape a luxuriance of composition, and an effect of light and shadow, which have scarcely been equalled...to the last period of his life, Mr Adam displayed an increasing vigour of genius and refinement of taste: for in the space of one year preceding his death, he designed eight great public works, besides twenty five private buildings, so various in their style, and so beautiful in their composition, that they have been allowed by the best judges, sufficient of themselves, to establish his fame unrivalled as an artist.

He left nearly 9,000 drawings, 8,856 of which (by both Robert and James Adam) were subsequently purchased in 1833 for £200 by the architect John Soane and are now at the Soane Museum in London.[36]

List of architectural works edit

Works include:[37]

Public buildings edit

Churches edit

Mausoleums edit

Urban domestic work edit

Country houses with major work edit

Garden buildings and follies edit

  • Stables, Inveraray Castle, joint work with his brother John (1758–60)
  • North Lodge, Kedleston Hall (1759)
  • Circular and Octagon pavilion, La Trappe, Hammersmith (1760) for George Bubb Dodington (demolished)
  • Conservatory Croome Park (1760)
  • Rotunda Croome Park, attributed (1760)
  • Old Rectory, Kedleston Hall (c. 1761)
  • Entrance screen, Moor Park, Hertfordshire (1763)
  • The Conservatory, Osterley Park (1763)
  • Bridge, Audley End House, Essex (c. 1763–64)
  • Tea Pavilion, Moor Park, Hertfordshire (c. 1764)
  • Gatehouse Kimbolton Castle (c. 1764)
  • Bridge, Kedleston Hall (1764)
  • Estate Village Lowther, Cumbria (1766)
  • Dunstall 'Castle' and Garden Alcove, Croome Park (1766)
  • Entrance arch, Croome Court (1767)
  • Entrance Screen, Cullen House, Cullen, Moray (1767)
  • Bridge, Osterley Park (c. 1768)
  • Entrance screen, Syon House (1769)
  • Fishing, Boat & Bath House, Kedleston Hall (1770–71)
  • Circular Temple, Audley End House, Essex (1771)
  • Lion Bridge, Alnwick (1773)
  • Stag Lodge, Saltram House, Devon (c. 1773)
  • The Stables, Featherstone entrance & Huntwick arch Nostell Priory (1776)
  • Wyke Green Lodges, Osterley, Middlesex (1777); remodelled
  • the Home Farm, Culzean Castle, Ayrshire (1777–79)
  • Brizlee Tower, Alnwick, Gothic tower (1777–81)
  • Oswald's Temple, Auchincruive, Ayrshire (1778)
  • 'Ruined' arch and viaduct, Culzean Castle (1780)
  • The semi-circular conservatory, Osterley Park (1780)
  • Tea House Bridge, Audley End House, Essex (1782)
  • The Stables, Culzean Castle (c. 1785)
  • Stables, Castle Upton, Templepatrick, County Antrim, Ireland. (1788–89). Important range of office buildings in castle style.
  • Montagu Bridge, Dalkeith Palace, Lothian (1792)
  • Loftus Hall, Fethard-on-sea, County Wexford, Ireland. Date unknown. Proposed gates.
  • Lion Gate and Lodge, Syon Park, London. Date unknown.

Country houses with minor work edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b James, Jude (2005). Kirkcaldy: A History & Celebration of the Town. Francis Frith Collection. p. 60. ISBN 1-84567-749-8.
  2. ^ Pevsner, p. 237
  3. ^ Adam silver (1953). Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Her Majesty's Stationery Office (HMSO), p. 1.
  4. ^ Norwich, John Julius (1990). Oxford Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Arts. US: Oxford University Press. pp. 3. ISBN 978-0198691372.
  5. ^ Waterston, Charles D; Macmillan Shearer, A (July 2006). Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002: Biographical Index (PDF). Vol. I. Edinburgh: The Royal Society of Edinburgh. ISBN 978-0-902198-84-5. Retrieved 28 December 2011.
  6. ^ "Adam, Robert (1728–1792), architect". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/105. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. ^ Fleming, p. 76
  8. ^ Graham, p. 2
  9. ^ a b Graham, p. 4
  10. ^ a b Graham, p. 26
  11. ^ Graham, p. 27
  12. ^ Fleming, pp. 79–80
  13. ^ a b Fleming, p. 81
  14. ^ "Robert Adam 1728–1792 – Book Owners Online". www.bookowners.online. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  15. ^ Fleming, pp. 85–86
  16. ^ Fleming, p. 85
  17. ^ Graham, p. 47
  18. ^ Graham, p. 48
  19. ^ Graham, p. 50
  20. ^ Graham, p. 52
  21. ^ Graham, p. 54
  22. ^ Graham, p. 49
  23. ^ Graham, p. 53
  24. ^ Graham, p. 53-54
  25. ^ Graham, p. 55
  26. ^ C.M. Hogan, "Diocletian's Palace", The Megalithic Portal, A. Burnham ed, 6 Oct 2007
  27. ^ Roth, p. 397
  28. ^ Roth, p. 402
  29. ^ a b c d e f Steven Parissien (1992). Adam Style. Phaidon. pp. 43–44.
  30. ^ David Irwin (1997). Neoclassicism. Phaidon. p. 101.
  31. ^ a b c Glendinning and McKechnie, p. 106
  32. ^ Pevsner, p. 238
  33. ^ Glendinning & McKechnie, p. 108
  34. ^ a b c d e Graham, Roderick (2009) Arbiter of Elegance: A Biography of Robert Adam, Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-84158-802-5, pp. 328–329
  35. ^ Graham, p. 330
  36. ^ page 11, The Adam Brothers in Rome: Drawings from the Grand Tour, A.A. Tait, 2008 Scala Publishers Ltd, ISBN 978-1-85759-574-1
  37. ^ David King, The Complete Works of Robert & James Adam, 1991, Butterworth
  38. ^ "1765 – Interior Designs, Langford House, Mary St., Dublin". Archiseek – Irish Architecture. 11 January 2013. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
  39. ^ Craig, W. S. (1976). History of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 73–74.
  40. ^ "Summerhill House, Co. Meath: unexecuted design for an extension to the house for the Rt Hon. Hercules Langford Rowley, 1765 (1)". collections.soane.org. Retrieved 30 June 2023.

Sources edit

  • Adam, Robert (1764) Ruins of the palace of the Emperor Diocletian at Spalatro in Dalmatia
  • Bolton, Arthur T. (1922, reprinted 1984) The Architecture of Robert & James Adam, 1785–1794, 2 volumes ISBN 0-907462-49-9
  • Curl, James Stevens (2006) Oxford Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture 2nd Edition. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860678-8
  • Fleming, John (1962) Robert Adam and his Circle John Murray ISBN 0-7195-0000-1
  • Glendinning, Miles, and McKechnie, Aonghus, (2004) Scottish Architecture, Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-20374-1
  • Graham, Roderick (2009) Arbiter of Elegance: A Biography of Robert Adam (Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-84158-802-5)
  • Harris, Eileen (1963) The Furniture of Robert Adam Alec Tiranti, London. ISBN 0-85458-929-5.
  • Harris, Eileen (2001) The Genius of Robert Adam: His Interiors ISBN 0-300-08129-4
  • Lees-Milne, James (1947) The Age of Adam
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus (1951) An Outline of European Architecture 2nd Edition. Pelican
  • Roderick, Graham (2009) Arbiter of Elegance A Biography of Robert Adam. Birlinn ISBN 978-1-84158-802-5
  • Roth, Leland M. (1993). Understanding Architecture: Its Elements, History and Meaning (First ed.). Boulder, CO: Westview Press. ISBN 0-06-430158-3.
  • Stillman, Damie (1966) The Decorative Work of Robert Adam ISBN 0-85458-160-X
  • Tait, A. A. (2004) "Adam, Robert (1728–1792)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/105
  • Yarwood, Doreen (1970) Robert Adam ISBN 0-460-03824-9 and ISBN 0-460-02130-3 (1973 paperback)
  • Belamarić, Joško – Šverko, Ana (eds.): Robert Adam and Diocletian's Palace in Split, Zagreb 2017, ISBN 978-953-0-60975-4

Further reading edit

External links edit

Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Robert Colvile
(to 1761)
Member of Parliament for Kinross-shire
1768–1774
Succeeded by
George Graham
(from 1780)
Government offices
New office Architect of the King's Works
1761–1769
Served alongside: Sir William Chambers
Succeeded by

robert, adam, other, people, named, disambiguation, frse, fsascot, frsa, july, 1728, march, 1792, british, neoclassical, architect, interior, designer, furniture, designer, william, adam, 1689, 1748, scotland, foremost, architect, time, trained, under, with, o. For other people named Robert Adam see Robert Adam disambiguation Robert Adam FRSE FRS FSAScot FSA FRSA 3 July 1728 3 March 1792 was a British neoclassical architect interior designer and furniture designer He was the son of William Adam 1689 1748 Scotland s foremost architect of the time and trained under him With his older brother John Robert took on the family business which included lucrative work for the Board of Ordnance after William s death Robert AdamFRSE FRS FSAScot FSA FRSAPortrait attributed to George Willison c 1770 1775Born 1728 07 03 3 July 1728Kirkcaldy Fife Scotland 1 Died3 March 1792 1792 03 03 aged 63 London EnglandBurial placeWestminster AbbeyNationalityBritishAlma materUniversity of EdinburghStyleNeoclassicalParentWilliam Adam father RelativesJohn Adam brother James Adam brother OccupationArchitectPracticeAdam Brothers Edinburgh London BuildingsSyon HouseCulzean CastleKedleston HallPulteney BridgeHarewood HouseCharlotte SquareRobert Adam by James Tassie medallion In 1754 he left for Rome spending nearly five years on the continent studying architecture under Charles Louis Clerisseau and Giovanni Battista Piranesi On his return to Britain he established a practice in London where he was joined by his younger brother James Here he developed the Adam Style and his theory of movement in architecture based on his studies of antiquity and became one of the most successful and fashionable architects in the country Adam held the post of Architect of the King s Works from 1761 to 1769 Robert Adam was a leader of the first phase of the classical revival in England and Scotland from around 1760 until his death 2 He influenced the development of Western architecture both in Europe and in North America Adam designed interiors and fittings as well as houses 3 Much of his work consisted of remodelling existing houses as well as contributions to Edinburgh s townscape and designing romantic pseudo mediaeval country houses in Scotland 4 He served as the member of Parliament for Kinross shire from 1768 to 1774 5 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Architectural practice in Edinburgh 1 3 Grand Tour 1 4 Architectural practice in London 2 Public life 3 Architectural style 4 Influence 4 1 Written works 5 Death and burial 6 List of architectural works 6 1 Public buildings 6 2 Churches 6 3 Mausoleums 6 4 Urban domestic work 6 5 Country houses with major work 6 6 Garden buildings and follies 6 7 Country houses with minor work 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksBiography editEarly life edit nbsp Royal High School 1578 1777 on site of Blackfriars Monastery Edinburgh Adam was born on 3 July 1728 at Gladney House in Kirkcaldy Fife the second son of Mary Robertson 1699 1761 the daughter of William Robertson of Gladney and architect William Adam 1 6 As a child he was noted as having a feeble constitution 7 From 1734 at the age of six Adam attended the Royal High School Edinburgh 8 where he learned Latin from the second year lessons were conducted in Latin 9 until he was 15 he was taught to read works by Virgil Horace Sallust and parts of Cicero and in his final year Livy 9 In autumn 1743 he matriculated at the University of Edinburgh 10 and compulsory classes for all students were the Greek language logic metaphysics and natural philosophy 10 Students could choose three elective subjects Adam attended classes in mathematics taught by Colin Maclaurin and anatomy taught by Alexander Monro primus 11 His studies were interrupted by the arrival of Bonnie Prince Charlie and his Highlanders who occupied Edinburgh during the 1745 Jacobite rising At the end of the year Robert fell seriously ill for some months and it seems unlikely that he returned to university having completed only two years of study 12 On his recovery from illness in 1746 he joined his elder brother John as apprentice to his father He assisted William Adam on projects such as the building of Inveraray Castle and the continuing extensions of Hopetoun House William s position as Master Mason to the Board of Ordnance also began to generate much work as the Highlands were fortified following the failed Jacobite revolt Robert s early ambition was to be an artist rather than architect and the style of his early sketches in the manner of Salvator Rosa are reflected in his earliest surviving architectural drawings which show picturesque gothic follies 13 William Adam died in June 1748 and left Dowhill a part of the Blair Adam estate which included Dowhill Castle to Robert From his father Robert inherited an extensive library and extended it 14 Architectural practice in Edinburgh edit nbsp Entrance front of Hopetoun House designed by William Adam and modified by the Adam BrothersOn William Adam s death John Adam inherited both the family business and the position of Master Mason to the Board of Ordnance He immediately took Robert into partnership later to be joined by James Adam The Adam Brothers first major commission was the decoration of the grand state apartments on the first floor at Hopetoun House followed by their first new build at Dumfries House For the Board of Ordnance the brothers were the main contractor at Fort George a large modern fort near Inverness designed by military engineer Colonel Skinner Visits to this project begun in 1750 would occupy the brothers every summer for the next 10 years and along with works at many other barracks and forts provided Robert with a solid foundation in practical building 15 In the winter of 1749 1750 Adam travelled to London with his friend the poet John Home He took the opportunity for architectural study visiting Wilton designed by Inigo Jones and the Queens Hermitage in Richmond by Roger Morris His sketchbook of the trip also shows a continuing interest in gothic architecture 16 Among his friends at Edinburgh were the philosophers Adam Ferguson and David Hume and the artist Paul Sandby whom he met in the Highlands Other Edinburgh acquaintances included Gilbert Elliot William Wilkie John Home and Alexander Wedderburn 13 Grand Tour edit nbsp Plan of the Diocletian palace in Split Croatia R Adam 1764 nbsp Peristyle of the Diocletian palace in Split Croatia R Adam 1764On 3 October 1754 Robert Adam in the company of his brother James who went as far as Brussels set off from Edinburgh for his Grand Tour stopping for a few days in London where they visited the Mansion House London St Stephen Walbrook 17 St Paul s Cathedral Windsor Berkshire in the company of Thomas Sandby who showed them his landscaping at Windsor Great Park and Virginia Water Lake 18 They sailed from Dover arriving in Calais 19 on 28 October 1754 20 He joined Charles Hope Weir brother of the Earl of Hopetoun in Brussels 21 and together they travelled to Rome 22 Hope agreed to take Adam on the tour at the suggestion of his uncle the Marquess of Annandale who had undertaken the Grand Tour himself While in Brussels the pair attended a Play and Masquerade as well as visiting churches and palaces in the city 23 Travelling on to Tournai then Lille where they visited the citadel designed by Sebastien Le Prestre de Vauban 24 By 12 November 1754 Adam and Hope were in Paris where they took lodgings in Hotel de Notre Dame 25 Adam and Hope travelled on to Italy together before falling out in Rome over travelling expenses and accommodation Robert Adam stayed on in Rome until 1757 studying classical architecture and honing his drawing skills His tutors included the French architect and artist Charles Louis Clerisseau and the Italian artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi Here he became acquainted with the work of the pioneering classical archaeologist and art historian theorist Johann Joachim Winckelmann On his return journey Adam and Clerisseau spent time intensively studying the ruins of Diocletian s Palace at Spalatro in Dalmatia now known as Split in modern Croatia 26 These studies were later published as Ruins of the Palace of the Emperor Diocletian at Spalatro in Dalmatia in 1764 Architectural practice in London edit nbsp Admiralty Screen 1759 61 Whitehall London one of Adam s first executed buildings after his grand tour nbsp Kedleston Hall in Derbyshire The south front by Robert Adam based on the Arch of Constantine in RomeHe returned to Britain in 1758 and set up in business in London with his brother James Adam They focused on designing complete schemes for the decoration and furnishing of houses Palladian design was popular and Robert designed a number of country houses in this style 27 but he evolved a new more flexible style incorporating elements of classical Roman design alongside influences from Greek Byzantine and Baroque styles 28 The Adam brothers success can also be attributed to a desire to design everything down to the smallest detail ensuring a sense of unity in their design In Adam interiors all the furnishings were custom designed to accord with the decoration of the room in a unified harmony Often the carpets were woven to match the intricate patterns of the ceiling above while every fitting including sconces mirrors and doorknobs also received a custom design emulating the motifs of the room 29 30 Adams practice was not without mishap however In 1768 the Adam brothers purchased a 99 year lease for a marshy plot of land beside the Thames in Westminster where they built a 24 house terrace development known as the Adelphi 29 The project was very ambitious and is the first instance where terraced houses were designed individually to give unified harmony to the whole development previously terraced houses were built to one replicated design side by side around a square 29 However the project became a white elephant for Robert and his brothers with uncertain financing and costs spiralling out of control The houses were built on a huge artificial terrace resting on vaulted substructures on the level of the Thames which Robert Adam was certain could be leased to the British government as warehouses However this interest failed to materialize and the Adam brothers were left with huge debts and in 1772 had to lay off 3 000 workmen and cease building Adam himself moved into one of the houses in the Adelphi along with supportive friends like David Garrick and Josiah Wedgewood who opened a showroom for his ceramics in one of the houses In 1774 a public lottery was held to raise funds for the brothers which allowed them to avert bankruptcy 29 Public life edit nbsp One of Adam s masterpieces Pulteney Bridge BathAdam was elected a fellow of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts Manufactures and Commerce in 1758 and of the Society of Antiquaries in 1761 the same year he was appointed Architect of the King s Works jointly with Sir William Chambers His younger brother James succeeded him in this post when he relinquished the role in 1768 to devote more time to his elected office as member of Parliament for Kinross shire Architectural style editAdam rejected the Palladian style as introduced to England by Inigo Jones and advocated by Lord Burlington as ponderous and disgustful 31 However he continued their tradition of drawing inspiration directly from classical antiquity during his four year stay in Europe 31 Adam developed a new style of architectural decoration one which was more archaeologically accurate than past Neoclassical styles but nonetheless innovative and not bound only by ancient precedents In Works in Architecture co authored with his brother James the brothers stated that Graeco Roman examples should serve as models which we should imitate and as standards by which we ought to judge 29 The discoveries in Herculaneum and Pompeii ongoing at the time provided ample material for Robert Adam to draw on for inspiration 29 The Adam brothers principle of movement was largely Robert s conception although the theory was first written down by James Movement relied on dramatic contrasts and diversity of form and drew on the picturesque aesthetic The first volume of the Adam brother s Works 1773 cited Kedleston Hall designed by Robert in 1761 as an outstanding example of movement in architecture By contrasting room sizes and decorative schemes Adam applied the concept of movement to his interiors also His style of decoration described by Pevsner as Classical Rococo drew on Roman grotesque stucco decoration 31 32 Influence edit nbsp Adam designed bookcase 1776 probably built by Thomas ChippendaleAdam s work had influenced the direction of architecture and design across the western world In England his collaboration with Thomas Chippendale resulted in some of the finest neoclassicist designs of the time most notably in the Harewood House collection of Chippendale s work In North America the Federal style owes much to neoclassicism as practised by Adam In Europe Adam notably influenced Charles Cameron the Scotsman who designed Tsarskoye Selo and other Russian palaces for Catherine the Great 33 However by the time of his death Adam s neoclassicism was being superseded in Britain by a more severe Greek phase of the classical revival as practised by James Athenian Stuart The Adam brothers employed several draughtsmen who would go on to establish themselves as architects including George Richardson and the Italian Joseph Bonomi who Robert originally hired in Rome Written works edit During their lifetime Robert and James Adam published two volumes of their designs Works in Architecture of Robert and James Adam in 1773 1778 and 1779 a third volume was published posthumously in 1822 Death and burial editAdam had long suffered from stomach and bowel problems 34 probably caused by a peptic ulcer and irritable bowel syndrome While at home 11 Albemarle Street London on 1 March 1792 one of the ulcers burst and on 3 March Adam died 34 The funeral was held on 10 March he was buried in the south aisle of Westminster Abbey 34 The pall bearers were several of his clients Henry Scott 3rd Duke of Buccleuch George Coventry 6th Earl of Coventry James Maitland 8th Earl of Lauderdale David Murray 2nd Earl of Mansfield Lord Frederick Campbell and Sir William Pulteney 5th Baronet 34 Knowing he was dying he drafted his will on 2 March 1792 Having never married Adam left his estate to his sisters Elizabeth Adam and Margaret Adam 34 His obituary appeared in the March 1792 edition of The Gentleman s Magazine 35 It is somewhat remarkable that the Arts should be deprived at the same time of two of their greatest ornaments Sir Joshua Reynolds and Mr Adam and it is difficult to say which of them excelled most in his particular profession Mr Adam produced a total change in the architecture of this country and his fertile genius in elegant ornament was not confined to the decoration of buildings but has been diffused to every branch of manufacture His talents extend beyond the lie of his own profession he displayed in his numerous drawings in landscape a luxuriance of composition and an effect of light and shadow which have scarcely been equalled to the last period of his life Mr Adam displayed an increasing vigour of genius and refinement of taste for in the space of one year preceding his death he designed eight great public works besides twenty five private buildings so various in their style and so beautiful in their composition that they have been allowed by the best judges sufficient of themselves to establish his fame unrivalled as an artist He left nearly 9 000 drawings 8 856 of which by both Robert and James Adam were subsequently purchased in 1833 for 200 by the architect John Soane and are now at the Soane Museum in London 36 List of architectural works editWorks include 37 Public buildings edit Fort George Scotland the buildings within the fort were designed by William Adam after his death his sons oversaw completion 1748 69 The Argyll Arms Inveraray 1750 56 The Town House Inveraray 1750 57 Royal Exchange Edinburgh with his brother John Adam 1753 54 Screen in front of the Old Admiralty Whitehall London 1760 Kedleston Hotel Quarndon 1760 Little Market Hall High Wycombe Buckinghamshire 1761 later altered Riding School Edinburgh 1763 demolished Courts of Justice and Corn Market Hertford Hertfordshire now Shire Hall 1768 Altered but partially restored to original design A joint project with James Adam Pulteney Bridge Bath 1770 County House Kinross 1771 Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts Manufactures amp Commerce 1772 Register House Edinburgh 1774 1789 Market Cross Bury St Edmunds refaced and upper floor added a theatre now art gallery 1776 Theatre Royal Drury Lane London remodelled 1775 demolished Red Lion Inn Pontefract 1776 Drummonds Bank Charing Cross London 1777 78 demolished Home House London 1777 Old College University of Edinburgh 1788 onwards completed to an amended design by William Henry Playfair 1831 The Bridewell Edinburgh 1791 demolished The Assembly Rooms Glasgow 1791 94 demolished Trades Hall Glasgow Scotland 1791 1792 completed 1792 1802 by his brothers The Royal Infirmary Glasgow 1791 94 rebuilt 1914 Coutts Bank enclosed bridge John Adam Street 1799 later demolished nbsp The City Chambers Edinburgh nbsp Register House Edinburgh nbsp Register House cross section Edinburgh nbsp Register House Edinburgh nbsp Old College Edinburgh Dome added later nbsp The Market Cross Bury St Edmunds nbsp Theatre Royal Drury Lane London rebuilt nbsp Edinburgh Bridewell in foreground demolished nbsp Pulteney Bridge Bath nbsp Little Market Hall High Wycombe nbsp McLennan Arch Glasgow built from the remains of Glasgow Assembly Rooms nbsp Kedleston Hotel Quarndon nbsp Coutts Bank John Adam Street demolished and replaced with this building nbsp Register House Edinburgh interior of the domeChurches edit Yester Chapel Lothian new west front in Gothic style 1753 Cumnock church Ayrshire 1753 54 demolished St Mary Magdalene Croome Park interior 1761 63 the church was designed by Lancelot Capability Brown St Andrew s Church Gunton Hall Gunton Norfolk 1769 St Mary s Mistley 1776 only the towers survive St George s Chapel Edinburgh 1792 demolished nbsp Mistley Church as built nbsp Mistley Church as it survives nbsp St Andrew s Church Gunton nbsp Yester Chapel west frontMausoleums edit William Adam Mausoleum Greyfriars Kirkyard 1753 55 Bowood House Mausoleum 1761 64 David Hume Mausoleum Old Calton Cemetery 1777 78 Templetown Mausoleum Castle Upton County Antrim Ireland 1789 for 2nd Lord Templetown Johnstone Family Mausoleum Ochil Road graveyard Alva Clackmannanshire 1789 90 Johnstone Family Mausoleum Westerkirk graveyard near Bentpath Dumfries and Galloway 1790 nbsp David Hume Mausoleum nbsp Templetown Mausoleum nbsp Johnstone Family Mausoleum BentpathUrban domestic work edit Little Wallingford House Whitehall London alterations 1761 demolished Lansdowne House Berkeley Square London 1762 67 partially demolished the Dining Room is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Drawing Room is in Philadelphia Museum of Art 34 Pall Mall London 1765 66 demolished Langford House Mary Street Dublin Ireland 1765 First recorded work in Ireland remodelling of house for Rt Hon Hercules Langford Rowley Demolished 1931 38 16 Hanover Square London alterations 1766 67 demolished Deputy Ranger s lodge Green Park London 1768 71 demolished in the 19th century The Adelphi development London 1768 1775 mostly demolished 1930s a ceiling amp fireplace are in the Victoria and Albert Museum Chandos House London 1770 71 8 Queen Street Edinburgh 1770 71 originally designed for Lord Chief Baron Ord now housing the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 39 Mansfield Street London 1770 72 Northumberland House London alterations 1770 demolished parts of the Glass Drawing Room survive in the Victoria and Albert Museum 20 St James s Square 1771 74 33 St James s Square 1771 73 Ashburnham House Dover Street London alterations 1773 Derby House 26 Grosvenor Square 1773 74 demolished Portland Place London 1773 94 only a few houses survive 11 St James s Square 1774 76 Frederick s Place London 1775 78 Roxburghe House Hanover Square London 1776 78 demolished Home House London 1777 before 1784 31 now 17 Hill Street London alterations 1777 79 Apsley House London 1778 altered Cumberland House Pall Mall London alterations and interiors 1780 88 demolished Marlborough House Brighton 1786 Fitzroy Square London 1790 94 only the south and east sides were built Charlotte Square north side Edinburgh 1791 94 169 185 High Street Glasgow 1793 demolished 1 3 Robert Street nbsp North side Charlotte Square Edinburgh nbsp Centre of North side Charlotte Square Edinburgh nbsp Chandos House London nbsp Music Room Home House London nbsp Drawing Room Home House London nbsp Design for the Etruscan Room Home House London nbsp Detail of the Etruscan Room Home House London nbsp Staircase Home House London nbsp Staircase Dome Home House London nbsp South side Fitzroy Square London nbsp East side Fitzroy Square London nbsp Surviving Adam Houses Portland Place London nbsp The Adelphi London largely demolished nbsp Robert Adam ceiling from the Adelphi now in the V amp A nbsp Model of the Glass Drawing Room Northumberland House in the V amp A nbsp Panels from the Glass Drawing Room Northumberland House in the V amp A nbsp Design for fireplaces in the withdrawing room and the Countess of Derby s dressing room Derby House nbsp Drawing Room Derby House nbsp Drawing Room Derby House nbsp Plan Derby House nbsp Ceiling Countess of Derby s Dressing Room Derby House nbsp Details for Derby House in Grosvenor Square an example of the Adam Brothers decorative designs nbsp 20 St James s Square London front facade nbsp 20 St James s Square London rear facade nbsp Dining Room ceiling 20 St James s Square London nbsp Music Room ceiling 20 St James s Square London nbsp Drawing Room ceiling 20 St James s Square London nbsp Fireplace Round room Strawberry Hill House Middlesex nbsp 1 3 Robert Street nbsp Lansdowne House Drawing Room now in Philadelphia Art Museum nbsp Lansdown House dining room now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New YorkCountry houses with major work edit Dumfries House Ayrshire 1754 1759 Hatchlands Park Surrey interiors 1756 Douglas Castle Lanarkshire 1757 1761 Paxton House near Berwick upon Tweed 1758 Shardeloes Amersham Buckinghamshire altered and completed the original design by Stiff Leadbetter 1759 63 Harewood House West Yorkshire 1759 1771 Kedleston Hall near Derby 1759 1765 Mellerstain House Kelso Scottish Borders 1760 1768 Ugbrooke Devon Osterley Park west London 1761 1780 Mersham le Hatch Mersham Ashford Kent 1762 1766 Syon House interior Brentford 1762 1769 Luton Hoo Bedfordshire 1766 1770 later extensively reconstructed 1816 by Robert Smirke and other architects later Nostell Priory 1766 80 Newby Hall Newby Boroughbridge North Yorkshire 1767 76 Kenwood House Hampstead London 1768 Saltram House Plymouth Devon 1768 69 Bowood House near Calne Wiltshire Diocletian wing and other interiors 1770 Wedderburn Castle Duns Scottish Borders Berwickshire 1770 1778 Culzean Castle South Ayrshire 1772 1790 Moreton Hall Suffolk 1773 1776 building and interiors Stowe Buckinghamshire 1774 Moreton Hall Bury St Edmund 1783 Brasted Place Kent c 1783 Pitfour Castle Tayside attributed c 1785 90 Seton Castle East Lothian 1789 Newliston Lothian 1789 Dalquharran Castle South Ayrshire 1789 1792 now a ruin Airthrey Castle Stirlingshire 1790 1791 Balbardie House Lothian 1792 demolished Gosford House near Longniddry East Lothian 1790 1800 nbsp Paxton House Berwickshire nbsp South front Kedleston Hall nbsp Cross section Kedleston Hall nbsp Kedleston Hall Marble Hall nbsp South front Stowe House slightly modified in execution nbsp Cross section of Hall Syon House London nbsp Plan Syon House London nbsp Apse Entrance Hall Syon House nbsp The Dining Room Syon House nbsp The Ante Room Syon House nbsp The ceiling Ante Room Syon House nbsp Long Gallery Syon House nbsp Closet off Long Gallery Syon House nbsp Kenwood House London nbsp Entrance portico Kenwood House London nbsp Kenwood House Library nbsp Cross section of the library Kenwood House London nbsp The library ceiling Kenwood House London nbsp Nostell Priory Yorkshire Adam wing on right nbsp Culzean Castle Ayrshire nbsp Culzean Castle Ayrshire nbsp Pitfour Castle Tayside nbsp The Saloon Saltram House nbsp Bowood House Adam s Diocletian wing on left the main block demolished in 1950s nbsp Bowood House Diocletian wing nbsp Wedderburn Castle Berwickshire nbsp The Entrance Hall Ceiling Harewood House nbsp Harewood House Yorkshire altered by Sir Charles Barry nbsp Harewood House State Bedroom nbsp The Ceiling State Bedroom Harewood House nbsp Harewood House Old Library nbsp Harewood House Music Room Ceiling nbsp The Music Room Harewood House nbsp Gallery ceiling Harewood House nbsp The Gallery Harewood House nbsp Gallery fireplace Harewood House nbsp Newliston House nbsp Dalquarran Castle Ayrshire nbsp Luton Hoo House Bedfordshire altered by Sir Robert Smirke and again in the late 19th century nbsp Mellerstain House Berwickshire nbsp Osterley Park London nbsp Main Staircase Osterley Park London nbsp Entrance Hall Osterley Park London nbsp Osterley Park Drawing Room Ceiling nbsp Portico Ceiling Osterley ParkGarden buildings and follies edit Stables Inveraray Castle joint work with his brother John 1758 60 North Lodge Kedleston Hall 1759 Circular and Octagon pavilion La Trappe Hammersmith 1760 for George Bubb Dodington demolished Conservatory Croome Park 1760 Rotunda Croome Park attributed 1760 Old Rectory Kedleston Hall c 1761 Entrance screen Moor Park Hertfordshire 1763 The Conservatory Osterley Park 1763 Bridge Audley End House Essex c 1763 64 Tea Pavilion Moor Park Hertfordshire c 1764 Gatehouse Kimbolton Castle c 1764 Bridge Kedleston Hall 1764 Estate Village Lowther Cumbria 1766 Dunstall Castle and Garden Alcove Croome Park 1766 Entrance arch Croome Court 1767 Entrance Screen Cullen House Cullen Moray 1767 Bridge Osterley Park c 1768 Entrance screen Syon House 1769 Fishing Boat amp Bath House Kedleston Hall 1770 71 Circular Temple Audley End House Essex 1771 Lion Bridge Alnwick 1773 Stag Lodge Saltram House Devon c 1773 The Stables Featherstone entrance amp Huntwick arch Nostell Priory 1776 Wyke Green Lodges Osterley Middlesex 1777 remodelled the Home Farm Culzean Castle Ayrshire 1777 79 Brizlee Tower Alnwick Gothic tower 1777 81 Oswald s Temple Auchincruive Ayrshire 1778 Ruined arch and viaduct Culzean Castle 1780 The semi circular conservatory Osterley Park 1780 Tea House Bridge Audley End House Essex 1782 The Stables Culzean Castle c 1785 Stables Castle Upton Templepatrick County Antrim Ireland 1788 89 Important range of office buildings in castle style Montagu Bridge Dalkeith Palace Lothian 1792 Loftus Hall Fethard on sea County Wexford Ireland Date unknown Proposed gates Lion Gate and Lodge Syon Park London Date unknown nbsp Screen Syon House London nbsp The Lion Gate Syon Park London nbsp Gatehouse Kimbolton Castle nbsp Entrance Arch Croome Park Worcestershire nbsp Garden Alcove Croome Court Worcestershire nbsp Rotunda Croome Park Worcestershire nbsp Dunstall Castle Croome Court Worcestershire nbsp Brizlee Tower Alnwick nbsp The semi circular conservatory Osterley Park nbsp Featherstone entrance Nostell Priory Yorkshire nbsp Oswald s Temple Auchincruive Ayrshire nbsp Kedleston Fishing Bathing amp Boat House nbsp Kedleston Bridge nbsp Former Home Farm Culzean Castle nbsp Lowther Castle Model Village nbsp Montagu Bridge Dalkeith Palace nbsp The Lion Bridge Alnwick nbsp Tea House Bridge Audley End nbsp Clock Tower Stables Castle Upton County Meath nbsp Stables Culzean Castle AyrshireCountry houses with minor work edit Hopetoun House West Lothian interiors 1750 54 the house was designed by William Adam Ballochmyle House Ayrshire c 1757 60 Compton Verney House added the wings and interiors 1760 63 Croome Park three interiors the Library the fittings are in the Victoria and Albert Museum Gallery and Tapestry Room this is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art 1760 65 Audley End House redecoration of ground floor rooms 1763 65 Goldsborough Hall near Knaresborough North Yorkshire 1764 1765 Alnwick Castle Northumberland interiors 1766 destroyed when Anthony Salvin created the current state rooms Woolton Hall Woolton Merseyside 1772 remodelled main facade and the interior Headfort House County Meath Ireland Internal work including stairs and notably the Great Eating Room 1775 for Thomas Taylour 1st Earl Bective Wormleybury Hertfordshire internal work including entrance hall amp staircase 1777 Downhill near Coleraine County Londonderry Ireland 1780 Design for dining room Not executed House is now a crumbling ruin Moccas Court Moccas Herefordshire internal work including drawing room 1781 Castle Upton Templepartick County Antrim Ireland Remodelling of house 1782 83 for 1st Lord Templetown Archerfield House Lothian internal work including library 1791 Summerhill House County Meath Ireland 1765 unexecuted Proposed alterations including a quadrant link connecting two wings 40 nbsp Summerhill House Main Front nbsp Compton Verney House wings by AdamSee also editAdam style Category Robert Adam buildingsReferences edit a b James Jude 2005 Kirkcaldy A History amp Celebration of the Town Francis Frith Collection p 60 ISBN 1 84567 749 8 Pevsner p 237 Adam silver 1953 Victoria amp Albert Museum London Her Majesty s Stationery Office HMSO p 1 Norwich John Julius 1990 Oxford Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Arts US Oxford University Press pp 3 ISBN 978 0198691372 Waterston Charles D Macmillan Shearer A July 2006 Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 Biographical Index PDF Vol I Edinburgh The Royal Society of Edinburgh ISBN 978 0 902198 84 5 Retrieved 28 December 2011 Adam Robert 1728 1792 architect Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 105 Subscription or UK public library membership required Fleming p 76 Graham p 2 a b Graham p 4 a b Graham p 26 Graham p 27 Fleming pp 79 80 a b Fleming p 81 Robert Adam 1728 1792 Book Owners Online www bookowners online Retrieved 5 September 2022 Fleming pp 85 86 Fleming p 85 Graham p 47 Graham p 48 Graham p 50 Graham p 52 Graham p 54 Graham p 49 Graham p 53 Graham p 53 54 Graham p 55 C M Hogan Diocletian s Palace The Megalithic Portal A Burnham ed 6 Oct 2007 Roth p 397 Roth p 402 a b c d e f Steven Parissien 1992 Adam Style Phaidon pp 43 44 David Irwin 1997 Neoclassicism Phaidon p 101 a b c Glendinning and McKechnie p 106 Pevsner p 238 Glendinning amp McKechnie p 108 a b c d e Graham Roderick 2009 Arbiter of Elegance A Biography of Robert Adam Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 802 5 pp 328 329 Graham p 330 page 11 The Adam Brothers in Rome Drawings from the Grand Tour A A Tait 2008 Scala Publishers Ltd ISBN 978 1 85759 574 1 David King The Complete Works of Robert amp James Adam 1991 Butterworth 1765 Interior Designs Langford House Mary St Dublin Archiseek Irish Architecture 11 January 2013 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Craig W S 1976 History of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh Oxford Blackwell pp 73 74 Summerhill House Co Meath unexecuted design for an extension to the house for the Rt Hon Hercules Langford Rowley 1765 1 collections soane org Retrieved 30 June 2023 Sources editAdam Robert 1764 Ruins of the palace of the Emperor Diocletian at Spalatro in Dalmatia Bolton Arthur T 1922 reprinted 1984 The Architecture of Robert amp James Adam 1785 1794 2 volumes ISBN 0 907462 49 9 Curl James Stevens 2006 Oxford Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture 2nd Edition Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860678 8 Fleming John 1962 Robert Adam and his Circle John Murray ISBN 0 7195 0000 1 Glendinning Miles and McKechnie Aonghus 2004 Scottish Architecture Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 20374 1 Graham Roderick 2009 Arbiter of Elegance A Biography of Robert Adam Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 802 5 Harris Eileen 1963 The Furniture of Robert Adam Alec Tiranti London ISBN 0 85458 929 5 Harris Eileen 2001 The Genius of Robert Adam His Interiors ISBN 0 300 08129 4 Lees Milne James 1947 The Age of Adam Pevsner Nikolaus 1951 An Outline of European Architecture 2nd Edition Pelican Roderick Graham 2009 Arbiter of Elegance A Biography of Robert Adam Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 802 5 Roth Leland M 1993 Understanding Architecture Its Elements History and Meaning First ed Boulder CO Westview Press ISBN 0 06 430158 3 Stillman Damie 1966 The Decorative Work of Robert Adam ISBN 0 85458 160 X Tait A A 2004 Adam Robert 1728 1792 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 105 Yarwood Doreen 1970 Robert Adam ISBN 0 460 03824 9 and ISBN 0 460 02130 3 1973 paperback Belamaric Josko Sverko Ana eds Robert Adam and Diocletian s Palace in Split Zagreb 2017 ISBN 978 953 0 60975 4Further reading editChambers Robert Thomson Thomas Napier 1857 Adam Robert A Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Scotsmen Vol 1 Glasgow Blackie and Son pp 18 20 via Wikisource Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Adam Robert Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Adam Archival material relating to Robert Adam UK National Archives nbsp Parliament of Great BritainPreceded byRobert Colvile to 1761 Member of Parliament for Kinross shire1768 1774 Succeeded byGeorge Graham from 1780 Government officesNew office Architect of the King s Works1761 1769 Served alongside Sir William Chambers Succeeded bySir Robert Taylor and James Adam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Adam amp oldid 1206345933, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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