GIBBS, James - b. 1682 Aberdeen, d. 1754 London - WGA

GIBBS, James

(b. 1682 Aberdeen, d. 1754 London)

Scottish architect. His synthesis of Italian and English modes, exemplified in his church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, set a standard for 18th-century British and American church architecture.

Gibbs studied in Rome with Carlo Fontana, a leading exponent of the Italian Baroque style. His Roman experience gave him a decisive edge over competitors on his return to England in 1709. Gibbs’s first public building, the church of St. Mary-le-Strand (1714-17), shows most directly his Italian Baroque influence. He soon became the foremost Tory architect. Private houses that he built, or in which he had a hand, number at least 50. After the 1720s the Baroque influence in his works declined, influenced by the aggressive Palladianism of Lord Burlington and the concurrent shift in public taste toward the classical.

Gibbs’s mature style represents a highly proficient synthesis of both Baroque and Palladian sources. His best-known work, St. Martin-in-the-Fields (designed 1720), with its lofty steeple and classical temple front, clearly demonstrates the intermingling of influences. Though criticized in its time - the French admired the portico and despised the steeple - St. Martin’s became the archetype of countless British and American churches. Gibbs’s other best-known buildings are the Senate House at Cambridge (1722-30) and the Radcliffe Camera (also called the Radcliffe Library) at Oxford (1737-49). His major written work, A Book of Architecture (1728), was the most widely used architectural pattern book in Britain and its colonies during the 18th century.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

The St. Martin-in-the-Fields at Trafalgar Square in London is the most important work of James Gibbs. It demonstrates the freedom with which Gibbs used his historical prototypes. The extended building with a Corinthian portico refers to Pantheon, here with nave structure and tower in the manner of Wren instead of the dome space. The original combination of temple fa�ade and a steeply rising tower was to provide a model for many parish churches throughout the country.

The picture shows the fa�ade viewed from Trafalgar Square.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

The Radcliffe Camera, the Oxford University Library, stands in the Italian Mannerist tradition. The round, domed structure rests on a rusticated base; pairs of Corinthian half-columns animate the fa�ade.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

The Radcliffe Camera, the Oxford University Library, stands in the Italian Mannerist tradition. The round, domed structure rests on a rusticated base; pairs of Corinthian half-columns animate the fa�ade.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

The Radcliffe Camera, the Oxford University Library, stands in the Italian Mannerist tradition. The round, domed structure rests on a rusticated base; pairs of Corinthian half-columns animate the fa�ade.

The picture shows a view of the Oxford’s Radcliffe Square with the Radcliffe Camera.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

In preparation of priesthood, James Gibbs had traveled to Rome in 1703, but then went to study under the architect Carlo Fontana. His first building on English soil, St. Mary-le-Strand, reflects Italian antecedents, a variety of Mannerist models.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

In preparation of priesthood, James Gibbs had traveled to Rome in 1703, but then went to study under the architect Carlo Fontana. His first building on English soil, St. Mary-le-Strand, reflects Italian antecedents, a variety of Mannerist models.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

In preparation of priesthood, James Gibbs had traveled to Rome in 1703, but then went to study under the architect Carlo Fontana. His first building on English soil, St. Mary-le-Strand, reflects Italian antecedents, a variety of Mannerist models.

The picture shows a side view.

Interior view
Interior view by

Interior view

The St. Martin-in-the-Fields at Trafalgar Square in London is the most important work of James Gibbs. It demonstrates the freedom with which Gibbs used his historical prototypes. The extended building with a Corinthian portico refers to Pantheon, here with nave structure and tower in the manner of Wren instead of the dome space. The original combination of temple fa�ade and a steeply rising tower was to provide a model for many parish churches throughout the country.

Interior view
Interior view by

Interior view

In preparation of priesthood, James Gibbs had traveled to Rome in 1703, but then went to study under the architect Carlo Fontana. His first building on English soil, St. Mary-le-Strand, reflects Italian antecedents, a variety of Mannerist models.

The picture shows the interior as viewed from the upper balcony.

Temple of Liberty
Temple of Liberty by

Temple of Liberty

Until the mid-eighteenth century, British architecture was wholly dominated by Palladianism. However, the supremacy of the Palladianism was on the wane in the second half of the century. The roughly simultaneous “discoveries” of both Greek Antiquity and the Middle Ages (the Gothic architecture) around the mid-eighteenth century brought with them a a basic, revolutionary change in historical perceptions of the time. When British architects and patrons now looked for a model for the design of their buildings, there was no longer a universally valid standard such as there had been in Palladianism up to the beginning of the eighteenth century. Now there were different styles of equal status from which one could choose.

In the park of Stowe in Buckinghamshire, one of the first Gothic Revival buildings was constructed in 1741: the Temple of Liberty with a triangular ground plan and polygonal corner towers and asymmetrically placed turrets, adorned with round and pointed arches, quatrefoils, pinnacles, and battlements. The Gothic temple was dedicated to liberty; in its mosaic-decorated interior, the owner’s Anglo-Saxon ancestors were commemorated.

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