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Drawing

18th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The nature of this room suggests that this may be a town house for a single gentleman.

Chambers was born in Sweden and died in London. He travelled widely, visiting China, and studied architecture at the Ecole des Arts, Paris, from 1749 and in Italy from 1750 to 1755. Many of his drawings from this period are contained in his important 'Franco-Italian' album, held in the V&A. Chambers moved to London in 1755 and published his influential Treatise on Civil Architecture in 1759. Chambers demonstrated the breadth of his style in buildings such as Gower (later Carrington) House and Melbourne House, London, in such country houses as Duddingston, Scotland, and in the garden architecture he designed for Wilton House, Wiltshire, and at Kew Gardens. He became head of government building in 1782, and in this capacity built Somerset House, London.

Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Pen and ink, pencil and yellow and grey washes
Brief description
Ground-floor plan of an unidentified house; William Chambers.
Physical description
Ground-floor plan of an unidentified house. This drawing is apparently in an office hand and is an unidentified project for a small house on an urban site. (Scale: ¼ inches to 1 foot)
Dimensions
  • Height: 487mm
  • Width: 302mm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
'Ground floor'

Note
in ink, with room names.
Object history
Bought from E. Parsons, 1869.
Historical context
The nature of this room suggests that this may be a town house for a single gentleman.
Summary
The nature of this room suggests that this may be a town house for a single gentleman.

Chambers was born in Sweden and died in London. He travelled widely, visiting China, and studied architecture at the Ecole des Arts, Paris, from 1749 and in Italy from 1750 to 1755. Many of his drawings from this period are contained in his important 'Franco-Italian' album, held in the V&A. Chambers moved to London in 1755 and published his influential Treatise on Civil Architecture in 1759. Chambers demonstrated the breadth of his style in buildings such as Gower (later Carrington) House and Melbourne House, London, in such country houses as Duddingston, Scotland, and in the garden architecture he designed for Wilton House, Wiltshire, and at Kew Gardens. He became head of government building in 1782, and in this capacity built Somerset House, London.
Bibliographic reference
Snodin Catalogue Number: 764
Collection
Accession number
7076:31

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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