John Vanbrugh: Difference between revisions
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Baptised January 24, 1664, died March 26, 1726. | Baptised January 24, 1664, died March 26, 1726. | ||
John Vanbrugh was a famous dramatist and English [[Baroque]] architect, most known for his comedies ''The Relapse'' (1696) and ''The Provok’d Wife'' (1697) as well as for [[Blenheim Palace]] (Oxfordshire) and Castle Howard (Yorkshire) which he designed (together with Nicholas Hawksmoor). | John Vanbrugh was a famous dramatist and English [[Baroque]] architect, most known for his comedies ''The Relapse'' (1696) and ''The Provok’d Wife'' (1697) as well as for [[Blenheim Palace]] (Oxfordshire) and Castle Howard (Yorkshire) which he designed (together with [[Nicholas Hawksmoor]]). | ||
He was born as the son of a businessman in Chester and educated there. In 1686 he joined the army and in 1690 he was arrested in Calais, France, for possibly being an English spy. He was released in 1692. In prison, he wrote his first piece of drama. | He was born as the son of a businessman in Chester and educated there. In 1686 he joined the army and in 1690 he was arrested in Calais, France, for possibly being an English spy. He was released in 1692. In prison, he wrote his first piece of drama. | ||
His first comedies ''The Relapse'' and ''The Provok’d Wife'' were major successes. Jeremy Collier’s ''Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage'' (1698) | His first comedies ''The Relapse'' and ''The Provok’d Wife'' were major successes. Jeremy Collier’s ''Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage'' (1698) also aimed at Vanbrugh’s works because of their (relative) explicitness. | ||
In 1702 Vanbrugh started working as an architect by designing Castle Howard (Yorkshire). [[Christopher Wren]]’s clerk Nicholas Hawksmoor became Vanbrugh’s assistant i.e. partner. Their buildings are marked by a “rhythmic effect of diversified masses” (Encyclopaedia Britannica). Vanbrugh usually worked on the general plans of their constructions and Hawksmoor was concerned with the details. | In 1702 Vanbrugh started working as an architect by designing Castle Howard (Yorkshire). [[Christopher Wren]]’s clerk Nicholas Hawksmoor became Vanbrugh’s assistant, i.e. partner. Their buildings are marked by a “rhythmic effect of diversified masses” (Encyclopaedia Britannica). Vanbrugh usually worked on the general plans of their constructions and Hawksmoor was concerned with the details. | ||
In 1705 Vanbrugh established the Queen’s Theatre at the Haymarket in London and afterwards became its manager and principal author (as the acoustics were bad for theatre performances, the building later was turned into an opera house). The theatrical means of surprise and illusion that he learned there can supposedly be traced in his architecture, too. From 1705 till 1716 he and Hawksmoor built their most famous construction: [[Blenheim Palace]]. | In 1705 Vanbrugh established the Queen’s Theatre at the Haymarket in London and afterwards became its manager and principal author (as the acoustics were bad for theatre performances, the building later was turned into an opera house). The theatrical means of surprise and illusion that he learned there can supposedly be traced in his architecture, too. From 1705 till 1716 he and Hawksmoor built their most famous construction: [[Blenheim Palace]]. | ||
Revision as of 11:11, 7 January 2010
Baptised January 24, 1664, died March 26, 1726.
John Vanbrugh was a famous dramatist and English Baroque architect, most known for his comedies The Relapse (1696) and The Provok’d Wife (1697) as well as for Blenheim Palace (Oxfordshire) and Castle Howard (Yorkshire) which he designed (together with Nicholas Hawksmoor).
He was born as the son of a businessman in Chester and educated there. In 1686 he joined the army and in 1690 he was arrested in Calais, France, for possibly being an English spy. He was released in 1692. In prison, he wrote his first piece of drama.
His first comedies The Relapse and The Provok’d Wife were major successes. Jeremy Collier’s Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage (1698) also aimed at Vanbrugh’s works because of their (relative) explicitness.
In 1702 Vanbrugh started working as an architect by designing Castle Howard (Yorkshire). Christopher Wren’s clerk Nicholas Hawksmoor became Vanbrugh’s assistant, i.e. partner. Their buildings are marked by a “rhythmic effect of diversified masses” (Encyclopaedia Britannica). Vanbrugh usually worked on the general plans of their constructions and Hawksmoor was concerned with the details.
In 1705 Vanbrugh established the Queen’s Theatre at the Haymarket in London and afterwards became its manager and principal author (as the acoustics were bad for theatre performances, the building later was turned into an opera house). The theatrical means of surprise and illusion that he learned there can supposedly be traced in his architecture, too. From 1705 till 1716 he and Hawksmoor built their most famous construction: Blenheim Palace.
In 1714 George I knighted him and made him comptroller again (i.e. he was in charge of arranging royal ceremonial affairs), an office that he had already held in 1702 under Queen Anne I.
Vanbrugh was a member of the exclusive Kit Cat club that from 1703 onward became the place to be for Whigs. Vanbrugh was a Whig in his early days himself and therefore, Whig aristocrats also were his patrons.
Sources
"Sir John Vanbrugh." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 19 Jul. 2009 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/622815/Sir-John-Vanbrugh>.
Hook, Judith. The Baroque Age in England. London: Thames and Hudson, 1976.