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William Wardell's 1859 St John's College - a rare realisation of Pugin's ideal Catholic College?

journal contribution
posted on 2011-12-01, 00:00 authored by Ursula De JongUrsula De Jong
William Wardell’s St John’s College, Sydney, considered the grandest and architecturally most distinguished university college in New South Wales, is an exceptional example of 19th century Gothic Revival architecture.  The information board outside the college states that St John’s is ‘a rare realisation of Pugin’s ideal Catholic College’ and further that ‘it demonstrates [Pugin]’s profound influence on the work of Wardell’. This is but a small part of the story. The commission for St John’s College was far more complex.  The correspondence between the architects, William Wardell, Edmund Blacket and others, and St John’s Council indicates that right from the beginning there was a general lack of understanding of Wardell’s original design concept for the building. This has continued to the present day, as evidenced by the information on the board outside St John’s College, in which it is incorrectly assumed that Wardell’s proposal included a quadrangle as featured in Pugin’s ‘ideal College’. This paper, based largely on primary sources, investigates such claims about St John’s, considers William Wardell and the Gothic Revival, examines St John’s College within the University of Sydney – its design and its translation and posits a few conclusions leading to new understandings.

History

Journal

Fabrications

Volume

20

Issue

12

Pagination

86 - 107

Publisher

University of Queensland Press

Location

Brisbane, Qld.

ISSN

1033-1867

eISSN

2164-4756

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, University of Queensland Press

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