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Cultural connections across time and place : Wardell's late 19th century Genazzano FCJ College Kew

conference contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by Ursula De JongUrsula De Jong
The Catholic Church was profoundly affected by the 1872 Victorian Education Act, which made education secular, compulsory and free, and led to the withdrawal of state aid to religious schools. In order for the Church to run its own schools, it had to look overseas for help and invited religious teaching orders, such as the Faithful Companions of Jesus (FCJs) to set up schools in Victoria, Australia. In many instances purpose built buildings were designed by architects. William Wardell was well established in private practice in Sydney when he designed the new Convent and School, Kew, Victoria, for the FCJ Sisters, in the late 1880s. Building commenced just before the crash of Marvellous Melbourne. Less than half of the total concept of Wardell’s original plan was built. It opened for business in April 1891. Today this building forms the heart of the contemporary Genazzano FCJ College Kew. Many histories intersect in this commission. The vision for Catholic education in Victoria in the late 19th century is critical. The FCJs charism and their experience of teaching in Europe, in France, England, Ireland, Italy and Switzerland, provides a model for their work in Australia. At this time the importance of architecture to society is made manifest in education and its demands on building: if learning is valued then buildings should reflect this, for public buildings can shape morality. Wardell was trained as a Gothic Revival architect and his building participates in a broader medieval and Gothic tradition. Wardell’s original plan for this late Victorian Gothic style asymmetrical three-storeyed building, was designed to integrate a convent, school, chapel, and dormitories. This paper considers architectural history from diverse perspectives, educational, social, religious, economic and political, recognising the complexity of this project and the people who played a part in its conception and realisation.

History

Event

SAHANZ Conference (26th : 2009 : Auckland, New Zealand)

Pagination

1 - 16

Publisher

Society of Architectural Historians Australia & New Zealand

Location

Auckland, New Zealand

Place of publication

Auckland, New Zealand

Start date

2009-07-02

End date

2009-07-05

ISBN-13

9780473150655

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Editor/Contributor(s)

J Gatley

Title of proceedings

SAHANZ 2009 : Cultural crossroads : proceedings of the 26th International SAHANZ Conference, the University of Auckland, 2-5 July 2009

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