John Carter (architect)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

John Carter (1748–1817) was an English draughtsman and architect, who was an early advocate of the revival of Gothic architecture.

Life

Carter was born on 22 June 1748,

Kennington Lane. Leaving school aged about twelve, he went home to his father, making working drawings for the men. In about 1764, following his father's death, Carter was taken into the office of a Joseph Dixon, a surveyor and mason, with whom he remained for some years.[1]

In 1774 he was employed to execute drawings of St. Paul's Churchyard for the Builders Magazine, edited by Francis Newbery, for which he was to continue to draw until 1786.[1] Between 1775 and 1778 he published almost 30 designs for Gothic buildings in the magazine. He insisted that the Gothic was the correct style for ecclesiastical structures, Classical modes being only suitable for "mansions and other structures of ease and pleasure".[3]

In 1780, on the recommendation of

Earl of Exeter, and Horace Walpole.[1]

Carter's drawings of Lea Castle

Publications

His first important published work was his Specimens of Ancient Sculpture and Painting, published in parts between 1780 and 1794.

John Britton.[1]

Between 1795 and 1813 Carter was further engaged in preparing plans, elevations, sections, and specimens of the architecture of ecclesiastical buildings, which were published at intervals by the Society of Antiquaries[1][8]

An important aspect of Carter's work was a series of more than 200 papers published in the

Gentleman's Magazine between 1798 and his death in 1817[7] as "Pursuits of Architectural Innovation". These papers partly consist of a series of attacks on contemporaries engaged in the restoration of buildings and monuments.[1] During this period – dominated by the Napoleonic wars – Carter appealed to the patriotism of his audience in his advocacy of the Gothic, by portraying the English Middle Ages, as a time of national glory and enlightened patronage, culminating in the reign of Edward III.[3] The articles were signed simply "An Architect", but Carter's authorship could not be concealed.[1]

Architectural work

Carter built little as an architect.

Death

Towards the autumn of 1816 his health began to decline. In the spring of the following year

dropsy made its appearance, and he died in Upper Eaton Street, Pimlico, on 8 September 1817, aged 69. He was buried at Hampstead, an inscribed stone to his memory being placed on the south side of the church. His collection, including drawings and antiquities, was sold by auction at Sotheby's on 26 February 1818.[1]

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Carter, John (1748-1817)" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  2. ^ Gunnis, Rupert (1954). Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660–1851. Odhams Press. pp. 84–86 – via Internet Archive.
  3. ^ a b Frew, M.R. (1982). "Gothic is English: John Carter and the revival of the Gothic as England's National Style". The Art Bulletin. LXIV (2).
  4. ^ The engraved title-page of the first volume reads "Specimens of the Antient Sculpture and Painting now remaining in this Kingdom, from the earliest period to the reign of Henry ye VIII, consisting of Statues, Bassorelievos ... Paintings on Glass and on Walls ... A description of each subject, some of which by Gentlemen of leterary [sic] abilities, and well versed in the Antiquities of this kingdom whose names are prefixed to their essays ... The Drawings made from the original Subjects, and engraved by John Carter, Nov. 1st, 1780." The dedication of this volume is to Horace Walpole, the patron of the book, and is dated November 1786. The second volume is dedicated to the Earl of Exeter, and its title-page is dated 1787; a postscript to the whole work is dated "London, May 1794" (a new edition, with index, appeared in 1838, 2 vol. in one, folio).
  5. ^ Republished as Specimens of Gothic architecture, and Ancient Buildings In England, comprised in 120 views, (4 volumes, London, 1824).
  6. ^ Part I deals with "The Orders of architecture during the British, Roman, Saxon, and Norman eras"; its engraved title-page is dated London, 1795, and its dedication (to H.R.H. the Duke of York) 1806. Part II, "The Orders of Architecture during the reigns of Henry III, Edward III, Richard II, Henry VI, Henry VII and Henry VIII", was not completed. Its title-page is dated 1807, but the engravings bear dates from 1807 to 1814.
  7. ^ a b c Summerson, John (1970). Architecture in Britain, 1530 to 1830. Pelican History of Art. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. pp. 510–12.
  8. St. Albans Abbey
    , 1813.
  9. .

External links

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Carter, John (1748-1817)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.