Yale University, School of Architecture: The MIT Press
Yale University, School of Architecture: The MIT Press
Yale University, School of Architecture: The MIT Press
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].
Yale University, School of Architecture and The MIT Press are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve
and extend access to Perspecta.
http://www.jstor.org
SirJohnSoane (175 3-1 837) was born was appointedarchitectto the Bank of ments,seekingalwaysto enhancethe
theson of a bricklayerin Goring-on- England,a job he laterdescribedas the "poeticeffects"and picturesquequali-
Thames,nearReading,England. He "prideand boast of mylife."The Bank tiesof thearchitectural settingand to
- a miniaturecity
was his masterpiece createdidacticdisplaysforthe benefit
beganhis architectural careerat age
fifteen,
joining the officeof George withintheCity,withfortified walls, of his students.One of the lastof
Dance theYoungerin the Cityof triumphal arches,courtyards, and vast thesealterationswas his Model Room,
London. When he was eighteen,he top-litbanking halls reminiscentof createdin 1834-3 5 m whathad been
enrolledat the RoyalAcademyas an Roman Baths.Soane remainedas the his wife'sbedroomon thesecond floor.
architecturalstudent,attendingthe Banks Architectforforty-five years, The room housed imaginativedisplays
evening lecturesgivenby the Professor onlyretiringat theage of eightyin in whichhistoricand contemporary
ofArchitecture Thomas Sandby,and in 1833. His othermasterpiecesinclude architectural models,including
thesame yearstartingworkforHenry Britain'sfirstpublic artgallery,the depictionsof antique buildingsin
Holland. It was duringtheseyearsthat Dulwich PictureGallery;diningrooms both ruinedand reconstructed states,
Soane musthave firstencountered at Nos. 10 and 11 Downing Street; weredisplayedalongsideone another,
theantiqueworld,and especiallythe workat numerouscountryhouses; surroundedby frameddrawingsof
buildingsof ancientRome thatso and the Soane tomb,one of onlytwo Soane's own works.
inspiredhim in his laterwork:the Grade 1 listedtombsin London. Soane In 18 33, Soane negotiatedan Act
Temple ofVestaat Tivoli; theTemple had a long associationwiththe Royal of Parliamentto settleand preservehis
of Castorand Polluxin the Forum, AcademyofArtsin London, wherehe house and collectionforthebenefitof
hailed since the Renaissanceas the was electedProfessorofArchitecture "amateursand students"in architec-
mostbeautifulexampleof the Corin- in 1806, a post he held forthirty-one ture,painting,and sculpture.Thé Act
thianorderin theworld;the Pantheon; years.In 18 3 1, he was knightedby statedthatthearrangements of objects
and the ruinsof theEmperorHadrians KingWilliam iv. Despite failingeye- mustbe preserved"as nearlyas pos-
Villa at Tivoli. sight,Soane continuedworkinguntil sible"as theywereleftat the timeof
In 1776, Soane won the Royal shortlybeforehis deathin 1837 at the his death.The Soane Museum,withits
AcademyGold Medal forArchitecture, age of eighty-four. evocativedisplays,remainsone of the
and as a resultwas awardeda traveling Soane is regardedas the fatherof worlds greatesthouse museums.
scholarshippaid forby King George thearchitectural professionin Britain, Soane's friendIsaac D'Israeli wrote
in. He set offforItalyat 5 a.m. on and his workstillprovidesinspiration to him in a letterof 183 5, "Yourmu-
March 18, 1778, a date he remem- to architectsacrosstheworld,from seum is permanently magical,forthe
beredwithnostalgiaforthe restof his ArataIsozaki in Japanto Richard enchantmentsof artare eternal.Some
life.Afterarrivingin Rome on May 2, Meier at the GettyCenterin Los in poems have raisedfinearchitectural
Soane was soon writingto a friendthat Angelesto RichardMacCormac at the edifices,but mostrarehave been those
his attentionwas entirelytakenup in RuskinArchivein Leicester.England's who have discoveredwhen theyhad
seeingand examiningthe numerous famousredtelephonebox was inspired finishedtheirhouse, ifsuch a house
and inestimableremainsof antiquity, by Soane s designs. can everbe said to be finished,that
and of the "zeal and attachment"he SirJohnSoane's house, museum, theyhad builta poem."
feltforthem.He asked his friendto and libraryat No. 13 Lincoln'sInn Soon afterSoane's deathin 1837
imagine"withwhatimpatienceI have Fields,London, has been a public his Model Room was disbandedto
waitedforthescenesI now enjoy." museumsince theearlynineteenth makeway forcuratorialoffices.This
Soane s timein Italywas spentvisit- century.Soane moved into thesquare represented not onlytheloss of one of
ing antique,Renaissance,and contem- in the 1790s, when he bought,-demol- Soane's mostevocativeinteriors, but
porarybuildingsfromGenoa, Vicenza, ished,and rebuiltNo. 12 (1792-94). also to some degreedilutedthe central-
and Veronain the northto Paestum Afterhis appointmentas Professorof ityof architecture to Soane's concep-
and Sicilyin thesouth. He oftentook Architecture at the RoyalAcademy, tionof his house and collection.
detailedmeasurements of monuments he wenton to acquire,demolish,and The acquisitionand restoration of
by climbingto dizzyingheightsand rebuildNo. 13, a largerproperty, to No. 14 Lincoln'sInn Fields,nextdoor
droppinga plumb line or usinga mea- accommodatehis ever-growing collec- to theMuseum, has made it possible
suringrod,and he filledmanyjournals tion of architectural antiquities.When to plan therestoration of theModel
withnotesand sketches. he was overseventy, he bought,demol- Room as partof a programofworks
Soane returnedto London in 1780 ished,and rebuiltNo. 14 (1824-25), which,iffundraising is successful,will
and set up his own architecturalprac- extendinghis museumpremisesacross be completedby 201 2 and will see the
tice. He marriedan heiress,Elizabeth the rearofthathouse. Throughoutthe whole of thesecond floor,including
Smith,in 1784. Using contactsmade whole period,Soane also made con- Soane's Bedroom,Bath Room, Ora-
in Rome to good effect,
he rapidly tinuousalterationsto his "Museum," tory,and Mrs. Soane's MorningRoom,
ForimagesofSirJohnSoane's made a name forhimself.In 1788, he addingmoreobjectsto his arrange- restored.
modelroomandmodels,see
pages 26,92-93,and 17O-171. 46 SirJohnSoane'sModelRoom
SirJohnSoane'sModelRoom 171