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Architect Drawings : A Selection of Sketches by World Famous Architects Through History

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Soane, Sir John (1753–1837)<br />

Sketch <strong>of</strong> a design for the south side <strong>of</strong> the Lothbury Court, Bank <strong>of</strong> England, November 9, 1799,<br />

Sir John Soane’s Museum, Soane 10/3/6, 56.5 68.4cm, Pencil, pen and brown ink with pink,<br />

brown, and gray washes<br />

The contemplation <strong>of</strong> a page <strong>by</strong> Sir John Soane initiates a discussion <strong>of</strong> the sketch as a form <strong>of</strong><br />

‘rough draft.’ Revealing Soane’s neoclassical intentions, this sketch presents the formalization and<br />

subsequent correction <strong>of</strong> an image intended to be altered. He required the draft to act as a medium<br />

for an evaluative design dialogue.<br />

An architect <strong>of</strong> both private country houses and the largest architectural commission in England<br />

<strong>of</strong> his time, the Bank <strong>of</strong> England, Soane emerged from humble beginnings. He was born in 1753, a<br />

country bricklayer’s son, which gave him early exposure to the building trades. Schooled at the Royal<br />

Academy <strong>of</strong> Arts starting in 1771, he met George Dance the Younger and James Peacock, Surveyor,<br />

who encouraged him to visit Rome, 1778–1780. On this excursion he also stopped in Paris and visited<br />

antiquities in southern France, Naples, and Sicily (Darley, 1999; Richardson and Stevens, 1999).<br />

Sir John Soane began his practice with the design <strong>of</strong> country houses, but in 1794 public commissions<br />

ensued starting with the House <strong>of</strong> Lords. Other projects followed, such as the Royal Entrance to the<br />

House <strong>of</strong> Lords, Law Courts, the Privy Council Chamber at Whitehall, and the Board <strong>of</strong> Trade. An<br />

advocate <strong>of</strong> French neoclassical architecture, he was influenced <strong>by</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> Borromini, Piranesi, and<br />

projects <strong>by</strong> his former employer George Dance (Richardson and Stevens, 1999; Darley, 1999).<br />

The design and building <strong>of</strong> the Bank <strong>of</strong> England was a long and complex project, beginning with<br />

Soane’s appointment as Surveyor to the bank in 1788. After completing many parts <strong>of</strong> the building, in<br />

1797 he began the design <strong>of</strong> Lothbury Court. Soane produced numerous schemes in drawing form for<br />

the Roman-inspired courtyard and its façades, reworking the façade many times over a period <strong>of</strong> two<br />

years (Schumann-Bacia, 1989; Trachtenberg and Hyman, 1986). This sketch, dated November 9,<br />

1799, and labeled as a design for the south side <strong>of</strong> the Lothbury Court (Figure 3.6) is a slow, deliberate,<br />

freehand ink drawing with pencil guidelines and numerous erasures and corrections.<br />

<strong>Sketches</strong> cannot necessarily equate first conceptual thoughts with finished work, but they do capture<br />

the process <strong>of</strong> ideas followed <strong>by</strong> evaluation and alteration, a process not altogether linear ( Jenny, 1989).<br />

<strong>Architect</strong>ural sketches, as compared to unfinished manuscripts, are distinctly part <strong>of</strong> a design process<br />

that encourages possibilities and remains indeterminate. Soane’s extensive design process may indicate<br />

that he worked through various façade iterations viewing the sketches as rough drafts. Since the sketch<br />

was completed in the definitive medium <strong>of</strong> ink, it is possible that image was meant to be a finished<br />

document and upon inspecting the form he made changes. As an erasure technique, one can see that<br />

ink had been scratched <strong>of</strong>f the surface where Soane changed his mind. The two arched niches are<br />

delineated disparately on a symmetrical façade as he searched for alternatives. Dimensions were<br />

changed as Soane used this sketch for design exploration. The ink wash and scratchy shadows helped<br />

him to visualize the three-dimensional aspects <strong>of</strong> the façade. On the margins <strong>of</strong> the page, Soane studied<br />

and eliminated possible details, thoughts he certainly would not have included on a finished document.<br />

He dated the sketch to recall the latest option. This was especially important considering the<br />

many versions <strong>of</strong> this design and if he left the design for a few days while attending to other projects.<br />

This sketch represents a ‘compositional’ stage <strong>of</strong> the process; it constitutes the incomplete and changeable<br />

‘pre-text’ as he was not searching for new constructs, but visually editing a proposed rough draft<br />

(De Biasi, 1989).<br />

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