Product details:
ISBN13: | 9780198955689 |
ISBN10: | 0198955685 |
Binding: | Paperback |
No. of pages: | 288 pages |
Size: | 234x156 mm |
Language: | English |
700 |
Category:
Oxford Jackson
Architecture, Education, Status, and Style
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication: 12 February 2025
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Short description:
This is the first biography of T. G. Jackson, an architect who transformed the image of Oxford, rebuilt public schools, and became a leading architect of the arts and crafts movement. Although many of his buildings are famous, until now he has been little known. Yet his work illuminates a whole society as well as an individual.
Long description:
In the late nineteenth century one man changed Oxford forever. T. G. Jackson built the Examination Schools, the Bridge of Sighs, worked at a dozen colleges, and restored a score of other Oxford icons. He also built for many of the major public schools, for the University of Cambridge, and at the Inns of Court. A friend of William Morris, he was a pioneering member of the arts and crafts moment. A distinguished historian, he also restored dozens of houses and churches - and ensured the survival of Winchester Cathedral. As an architectural theorist he was a leader of the generation that rejected the Gothic Revival and sought to develop a new and modern style of building.
Drawing on extensive archival work, and illustrated with a hundred images, this is the first in-depth analysis of Jackson's career ever written. It sheds light on a little-known architect and reveals that his buildings, his books, and his work as an arts and craftsman were not just important in their own right, they were also part of a wider social change. Jackson was the architect of choice for a particular group of people, for the 'intellectual aristocracy' of late Victorian England. His buildings were a means by which they could articulate their identity and demonstrate their distinctiveness. They reformed the universities and the schools whilst he refashioned their image.
Essential reading for anyone interested in Victorian architecture and nineteenth-century society, this book will also be of interest to all those who know and love Oxford or Cambridge.
Shortlisted for the Alice Davis Hitchcock Medal of the Society of Architectural Historians. Winner of the Philip Leverhulme Prize.
Drawing on extensive archival work, and illustrated with a hundred images, this is the first in-depth analysis of Jackson's career ever written. It sheds light on a little-known architect and reveals that his buildings, his books, and his work as an arts and craftsman were not just important in their own right, they were also part of a wider social change. Jackson was the architect of choice for a particular group of people, for the 'intellectual aristocracy' of late Victorian England. His buildings were a means by which they could articulate their identity and demonstrate their distinctiveness. They reformed the universities and the schools whilst he refashioned their image.
Essential reading for anyone interested in Victorian architecture and nineteenth-century society, this book will also be of interest to all those who know and love Oxford or Cambridge.
Shortlisted for the Alice Davis Hitchcock Medal of the Society of Architectural Historians. Winner of the Philip Leverhulme Prize.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
'Recording our Eclectic Age': Jackson and the Dilemma of Style
'The Unity of Art': Jackson and the Arts and Crafts
'The Maker of Modern Oxford': Jackson and the Architecture of Progress
'In the Shadow of Anglo-Jackson': Jackson and the Public Schools
'Cambridge at Last!': Jackson and the Architecture of Science
'An Intellectual Aristocracy': Jackson, his Clients, and their World
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
'Recording our Eclectic Age': Jackson and the Dilemma of Style
'The Unity of Art': Jackson and the Arts and Crafts
'The Maker of Modern Oxford': Jackson and the Architecture of Progress
'In the Shadow of Anglo-Jackson': Jackson and the Public Schools
'Cambridge at Last!': Jackson and the Architecture of Science
'An Intellectual Aristocracy': Jackson, his Clients, and their World
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index