WARE, Isaac - b. 1704 London, d. 1766 London - WGA

WARE, Isaac

(b. 1704 London, d. 1766 London)

English architect. He was born to a life of poverty, living as a street urchin, until he was adopted by Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington at the age of eight, after which he was groomed and educated as a young nobleman. Burlington, recognising his talent, intelligence and personality, took him into his own household. His subsequent education included a Grand Tour of Europe and the study of architecture.

In 1721, he was apprenticed to Thomas Ripley (c. 1683-1758), and followed him in positions in the Office of Works, but his mentor in design was Lord Burlington. Ware was a member of the St. Martin’s Lane Academy, which brought together many of the main figures in the English Rococo movement, among them Louis-François Roubiliac, who sculpted Ware’s portrait bust about 1741.

Although he held various posts with the Office of Works between 1728 and his death, including Secretary, Ware’s major works were for private patrons. Aside from Chesterfield House, Westminster, (1747-52; demolished 1937) with its Palladian exterior and Rococo interior details he built a small number of country houses, most of which have been subsequently remodeled or demolished. Clifton Hill House, Bristol, and Wrotham Park, Hertfordshire survive. Clifton Hill House, built in 1746-50, is a Palladian villa, a type Ware also used for two houses in Scotland in the next ten years, both with service wings linked to the main house by passages. At Wrotham (1754) the central block was flanked by wings ending in octagonal pavilions. He also engaged in speculative building in the West End of London.

Ware was dissatisfied with the first English language edition of Andrea Palladio’s I Quattro Libri dell’Architettura, translated by Giacomo Leoni (1686-1746), and in particular with Leoni’s illustrations. In 1738 Ware published his translation illustrated with his own careful engravings. In 1756 he published a wide-ranging work: A Complete Body of Architecture.

Garden façade
Garden façade by

Garden façade

Until the mid-eighteenth century, British architecture was wholly dominated by Palladianism. Virtually every landowner wanted a showy residence on his estates and a town house in London. Aristocratic and wealthy middle-class clients in Britain were the first in Europe to abandon the grammar of the Baroque for their country houses, and look for a more restrained, moderate concept of design that would nonetheless impress their friends and neighbours. They found it in the architecture of the Italian Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio, whose buildings are distinguished by great simplicity and a logically structured system of proportion.

In the first half of the eighteenth century, the whole of Britain was covered with Palladian buildings consisting of clearly defined cubes, designed on a strict system of proportions and externally very sparingly decorated. Fa�ades were marked with a large portico in the manner of classical temples, above a rusticated plinth level. A second villa boom in the mid-eighteenth century produced a crop of often smaller country houses around London for rich middle-class clients. An example is Wrotham Park, built by Isaac Ware for Admiral John Byng in 1754. The core of the house features basically the cube of a Palladian villa.

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