Everything about William Burges Architect totally explained
William Burges (
2 December,
1827–
20 April,
1881) was an
English architect and
designer. The greatest of the Victorian art-architects, Burges sought in his work an escape from 19th century
industrialisation and a return to the values, architectural and social, of an imagined
mediaeval England.
Biography
Burges was born on 2 December, 1827, the son of
Alfred Burges (1796-1886), a wealthy
civil engineer who undertook work in
Cardiff for
John Crichton-Stuart, 2nd Marquess of Bute, himself the father of Burges' later, greatest, patron, the 3rd Marquess. His family's wealth enabled Burges to devote his life to the study and practice of architecture, without requiring that he actually earn a living.
Burges entered
King's College London in
1839 and remained for four years before joining the office of
Edward Blore, surveyor to Westminster Abbey. Blore was, by then, a prestigious architect, who had made his reputation as a gothic revivalist. However, it wasn't Blore but
Augustus Welby Pugin who made the greatest early impression on Burges. Pugin's championing, almost leading, of the
Gothic Revival provided the inspiration that fuelled Burges' life's work.
After five years, Burges moved to the offices of
Matthew Digby Wyatt. Wyatt was then almost at the height of his influence and public prominence, culminating in his leading role in the direction of the
1851 Great Exhibition. Burges' work on the Medieval Court for this exhibition can, perhaps, fairly be said to have set the course of the remainder of his life.
Of equal importance and influence was Burges' travelling. "All architects should travel, but more especially the art-architect." Enabled by his private income, Burges moved through England, then
France,
Italy,
Greece and finally into
Turkey, studying and drawing on a prodigious scale. What he saw, and sketched, provided a repository of influences and ideas that he used, and re-used, for the whole of his career.
In 1856 Burges established his own architectural practice at 15 Buckingham Street,
The Strand. Some of his early items of furniture were created for this office and later moved to
The Tower House, Melbury Road,
Kensington, the home he built for himself towards the end of his life. His early architectural career was relatively unsuccessful although he won, at an early age, prestigious commissions for Lille Cathedral and the Crimea Memorial Church, both of which remained unbuilt. However, imbued by the belief that Early French provided the answer to the crisis of architectural style that beset mid-Victorian England; "I was brought up in the 13th century belief and in that belief I intend to die"; he finally secured his first major commission for
St. Fin Barre's Cathedral Cork in 1863. Vastly exceeding the intended budget, he produced a building that in size is little more than a large parish church but in impression fully merits the title of cathedral.
Other commissions, both ecclesiastical and domestic, followed until, in 1865, he met
John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute. The connection may have occurred as a result of Burges' father's own connection with the 2nd Marquess but this is uncertain.
However occasioned, the connection lasted the rest of Burges' life and led to his most important works, the castle at Cardiff, and Castell Coch. To the Marquess, and his wife, Burges was the "soul-inspiring one", and the relationship between them had some similarities to that of
Ludwig II of Bavaria and
Richard Wagner, and led to some similar results. Funded by the Marquess' almost limitless resources, Burges' re-building of
Cardiff Castle and the complete reconstruction of the ruin of
Castell Coch, (the Red Castle), north of the city, represent his highest achievements. Both present a fantasy of the medieval world undertaken with a brio, an inventiveness and a sheer architectural and decorative ability that sets them far apart from 19th century feudal pastiches.
Burges began building at
Cardiff Castle in 1868 and continued to work on the project, and at
Castell Coch, until his death in 1881. During this period, he also completed his work at
Knightshayes Court, although unfortunately not the building itself, for the
Heathcoat-Amory family; designed and built two fabulous churches, the
Church of Christ the Consoler at Skelton-on-Ure and
St Mary's, Studley Royal for the
1st Marquess of Ripon; created
Park House, the fore-runner of his own, for Lord Bute's engineer, James McConnochie; and built his own "Palace of the Arts",
The Tower House in Kensington.
Burges died, aged 53, on 20 April 1881, at
The Tower House, Melbury Road. He was buried in the tomb he designed for his mother at
West Norwood, a suitably gothic cemetery designed by the architect
William Tite.
Mordaunt Crook chooses Lady Bute's words as his epitaph; "ugly Burges who designed such lovely things - what a duck." Perhaps more arguably, Mordaunt Crook suggests that "the intensity of [Burges'] vision was(...) diluted by a luxurious lifestyle." It can surely be contended that the Arabic Room and the Summer Smoking Room in
Cardiff Castle, the Drawing Room at
Castell Coch, the rooms at
The Tower House, the Cat Cup and the drawings for the Sabrina Fountain in
Gloucester represent a more intense and more dazzling vision of the gothic revival than any other works of architecture, craftsmanship or draughtsmanship produced in 19th century Britain.
Study of Burges
Burges' limited output, and the general unpopularity of his work for much of the century following his death, meant that he was little studied. However, the past thirty years have seen a significant revival of interest in Burges, and the prices paid for examples of his painted furniture are now astronomical. By far the best, indeed the only, full study is J. Mordaunt Crook's (JMC)
William Burges and the High Victorian Dream (1981, John Murray, and now out of print).
In addition to J. Mordaunt Crook's
William Burges and the High Victorian Dream, other valuable sources on Burges, from a limited range, are two articles on Cardiff Castle and Castle Coch in
Mark Girouard's
The Victorian Country House (1979, Yale University Press, now out of print); the catalogue to the exhibition held in Cardiff in 1981 to commemorate the centenary of his death, entitled
The Strange Genius of William Burges (1981, edited by J Mordaunt Crook, published by The National Museum of Wales, also out of print); and John Newman's
The Buildings of Wales: Glamorgan (1995, Pevsner Architectural Guides series). The current curator of Cardiff Castle, Matthew Williams, has also written a number of Burgesian/Bute articles for the architectural press.
Work
This list of his buildings is fairly, but not fully, comprehensive but the list of furniture is selective. Good examples can be seen in the
Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A), the
Cecil Higgins Gallery,
Bedford (where his bedroom from
The Tower House is re-created) and
Manchester Art Gallery. No listing is given here of his extensive creations of jewellery and glass. JMC has a very full and useful list of works with an indication as to whether the work is still in situ, was never executed, has now been removed/demolished or where the present location is unknown.
Buildings
- Salisbury Cathedral - Chapter House restoration
- Waltham Abbey - restoration
- Worcester College, Oxford - chapel redecoration
- Saint Fin Barre's Cathedral, Cork, Ireland
- Knightshayes Court, Tiverton, Devon
- Cardiff Castle
- St Mary's Church, near Fountains Abbey, Yorkshire
- The Church of Christ the Consoler at Skelton-on-Ure, Yorkshire
- Castell Coch
- McConnochie House, Cardiff
- Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut: Seabury, Northam and Jarvis Halls, and unrealized College Master Plan: (External Link
)
- Speech Room, Harrow School
- The Tower House, Melbury Road, Kensington. Burges' own home.
Possible Attribution
* A photo comparison of William Burges
' Tower House and the St. Anthony Hall college literary society chapter House at Trinity College (Connecticut), Hartford, CT, USA. The Connecticut building is generally attributed to J. Cleaveland Cady.
Major pieces of furniture
The Yateman Cabinet - 1858 - the Victoria and Albert Museum
Narcissus Washstand - 1865 - privately owned, features in Waugh's "The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold"
Burges' Bed - 1865 - Cecil Higgins Gallery
The Clock Cabinet - 1867 - Manchester City Art Gallery
Tower House Bookcase - 1878 - Knightshayes Court
The 'Golden' Bed - 1879 - Victoria and Albert MuseumFurther Information
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