WREN, Christopher - b. 1632 East Knoyle, d. 1723 London - WGA

WREN, Christopher

(b. 1632 East Knoyle, d. 1723 London)

English architect. An eminent English architect, scientist and mathematician, he was the leader of the English Baroque School and the architect of Saint Paul’s Cathedral in London.

Christopher Wren was born in East Knoyle, Wiltshire, where his father was rector. His father later moved to Windsor and Wren was educated at Westminster School and then Oxford University. He showed an early talent for mathematics and enjoyed inventing things, including an instrument for writing in the dark and a pneumatic machine. In 1657, Wren was appointed professor of astronomy at Gresham College in London and four years later, professor of astronomy at Oxford. In 1662, he was one of the founding members of the Royal Society, along with other mathematicians, scientists and scholars, many of whom were his friends.

Wren’s interest in architecture developed from his study of physics and engineering. In 1664 and 1665, Wren was commissioned to design the Sheldonian Theatre in Oxford and a chapel for Pembroke College, Cambridge and from then on, architecture was his main focus. In 1665, Wren visited Paris, where he was strongly influenced by French and Italian Baroque styles.

In 1666, the Great Fire of London destroyed much of the medieval city, providing a huge opportunity for Wren. He produced ambitious plans for rebuilding the whole area but they were rejected, partly because property owners insisted on keeping the sites of their destroyed buildings. Wren did design 51 new city churches, as well as the new St Paul’s Cathedral. In 1669, he was appointed surveyor of the royal works which effectively gave him control of all government building in the country. He was knighted in 1673.

In 1675, Wren was commissioned to design the Royal Observatory at Greenwich. In 1682, he received another royal commission, to design a hospital in Chelsea for retired soldiers, and in 1696 a hospital for sailors in Greenwich. Other buildings include Trinity College Library in Cambridge (1677-92), and the façade of Hampton Court Palace (1689-94). Wren often worked with the same team of craftsmen, including master plasterer John Groves and wood carver Grinling Gibbons

Assessment

At his death Wren was 90. He had far outlived the age to which his genius belonged. Even the men he had trained and who owed much to his original and inspiring leadership were no longer young. The Baroque school they had created was already under fire from a new generation that brushed Wren’s reputation aside and looked back beyond him to Inigo Jones. Architects of the 18th century could not forget Wren, but they could not forgive those elements in his work that seemed to them unclassical. The churches left the strongest mark on subsequent architecture. In France, where English architecture rarely made much impression, St. Paul’s Cathedral could not be easily ignored, and the Church of Sainte-Genevieve (now the Panthéon) in Paris, begun about 1757, rises to a drum and dome similar to St. Paul’s. Nobody with a dome to build could ignore Wren’s, and there are myriad versions of it, from St. Isaac’s Cathedral (dome constructed 1840-42; completed 1858) in St. Petersburg to the U.S. Capitol at Washington, D.C. (dome built 1855-63).

It was only in the 20th century that Wren’s work ceased to be a potent and sometimes controversial factor in English architectural design.

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Exterior view

Wren’s last work was the Greenwich Hospital. This complex, a royal endowment, was meant to occupy an extended Charles II building. The accommodation was grouped around several courtyards lying one behind the other on an axis horizontal to the Thames. This sequence copied the pattern of Versailles. A unifying motif was provided by the extended colonnade.

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Hampton Court Palace is situated on the north bank of the River Thames, c. 23 km upstream from central London. In the building that survives, two main periods of work can be seen: the remains of the Tudor royal palace, begun by Cardinal Thomas Wolsey between 1514 and 1529 and completed by Henry VIII between 1529 and 1547; and the Baroque palace built for William and Mary between 1688 and 1702 by Christopher Wren. The palace has also been continually altered and repaired up to the present day. The Tudor part of the building is probably the most important surviving example of early Tudor domestic architecture in England, and the Wren building contains one of the finest collections of early 18th-century decorative arts in situ.

Hampton Court Palace was originally built at the beginning of the sixteenth century. It was extended during the reign of Henry VIII. After the Restoration, King Charles II and his successor James II visited Hampton Court but largely preferred to reside elsewhere. By current French court standards Hampton Court now appeared old-fashioned. It was in 1689, shortly after Louis XIV’s court had moved permanently to Versailles, that the palace’s antiquated state was addressed. England had two new joint monarchs, William of Orange and his wife, the daughter of James II, Queen Mary II. Within months of their accession they embarked on a massive rebuilding project at Hampton Court. The intention was to demolish the Tudor palace a section at a time, while replacing it with a huge modern palace in the Baroque style. The country’s most eminent architect, Sir Christopher Wren, was called upon to draw the plans, while the master of works was to be William Talman.

Hampton Court became the Versailles of the British royal house. Between 1689 and 1692, William III and Queen Mary had their summer residence built on the site of the Tudor palace. However, this was only one part of a much larger project which included different wings, “the King’s side” and the “Queen’s side,” galleries, courtyards and gardens, and was effectively an architectural response to the Louvre. Essential changes were made to the exterior, so that the building as it now stands should be regarded as a compromise. The lively contrast between the stonework and the red of the brick walls is charming. The French influence is clear in the runs of windows across the fa�ade and the garden fa�ade with its portal and pediment.

The picture shows Christopher Wren’s south front built for William and Mary viewed from the Privy Garden.

Exterior view
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Exterior view

Hampton Court Palace was originally built at the beginning of the sixteenth century. It was extended during the reign of Henry VIII. After the Restoration, King Charles II and his successor James II visited Hampton Court but largely preferred to reside elsewhere. By current French court standards Hampton Court now appeared old-fashioned. It was in 1689, shortly after Louis XIV’s court had moved permanently to Versailles, that the palace’s antiquated state was addressed. England had two new joint monarchs, William of Orange and his wife, the daughter of James II, Queen Mary II. Within months of their accession they embarked on a massive rebuilding project at Hampton Court. The intention was to demolish the Tudor palace a section at a time, while replacing it with a huge modern palace in the Baroque style. The country’s most eminent architect, Sir Christopher Wren, was called upon to draw the plans, while the master of works was to be William Talman.

Hampton Court became the Versailles of the British royal house. Between 1689 and 1692, William III and Queen Mary had their summer residence built on the site of the Tudor palace. However, this was only one part of a much larger project which included different wings, “the King’s side” and the “Queen’s side,” galleries, courtyards and gardens, and was effectively an architectural response to the Louvre. Essential changes were made to the exterior, so that the building as it now stands should be regarded as a compromise. The lively contrast between the stonework and the red of the brick walls is charming. The French influence is clear in the runs of windows across the fa�ade and the garden fa�ade with its portal and pediment.

The picture shows a view from the park.

Exterior view
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Exterior view

Hampton Court Palace was originally built at the beginning of the sixteenth century. It was extended during the reign of Henry VIII. After the Restoration, King Charles II and his successor James II visited Hampton Court but largely preferred to reside elsewhere. By current French court standards Hampton Court now appeared old-fashioned. It was in 1689, shortly after Louis XIV’s court had moved permanently to Versailles, that the palace’s antiquated state was addressed. England had two new joint monarchs, William of Orange and his wife, the daughter of James II, Queen Mary II. Within months of their accession they embarked on a massive rebuilding project at Hampton Court. The intention was to demolish the Tudor palace a section at a time, while replacing it with a huge modern palace in the Baroque style. The country’s most eminent architect, Sir Christopher Wren, was called upon to draw the plans, while the master of works was to be William Talman.

Hampton Court became the Versailles of the British royal house. Between 1689 and 1692, William III and Queen Mary had their summer residence built on the site of the Tudor palace. However, this was only one part of a much larger project which included different wings, “the King’s side” and the “Queen’s side,” galleries, courtyards and gardens, and was effectively an architectural response to the Louvre. Essential changes were made to the exterior, so that the building as it now stands should be regarded as a compromise. The lively contrast between the stonework and the red of the brick walls is charming. The French influence is clear in the runs of windows across the fa�ade and the garden fa�ade with its portal and pediment.

The picture shows a detail of the garden fa�ade.

Exterior view
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Exterior view

Hampton Court Palace was originally built at the beginning of the sixteenth century. It was extended during the reign of Henry VIII. After the Restoration, King Charles II and his successor James II visited Hampton Court but largely preferred to reside elsewhere. By current French court standards Hampton Court now appeared old-fashioned. It was in 1689, shortly after Louis XIV’s court had moved permanently to Versailles, that the palace’s antiquated state was addressed. England had two new joint monarchs, William of Orange and his wife, the daughter of James II, Queen Mary II. Within months of their accession they embarked on a massive rebuilding project at Hampton Court. The intention was to demolish the Tudor palace a section at a time, while replacing it with a huge modern palace in the Baroque style. The country’s most eminent architect, Sir Christopher Wren, was called upon to draw the plans, while the master of works was to be William Talman.

Hampton Court became the Versailles of the British royal house. Between 1689 and 1692, William III and Queen Mary had their summer residence built on the site of the Tudor palace. However, this was only one part of a much larger project which included different wings, “the King’s side” and the “Queen’s side,” galleries, courtyards and gardens, and was effectively an architectural response to the Louvre. Essential changes were made to the exterior , so that the building as it now stands should be regarded as a compromise. The lively contrast between the stonework and the red of the brick walls is charming. The French influence is clear in the runs of windows across the fa�ade and the garden fa�ade with its portal and pediment.

The picture shows the Fountain Court designed by Sir Christopher Wren.

Exterior view
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Exterior view

In 1666 the Great Fire destroyed London. Charles II commissioned Wren and his colleagues to submit proposals for the reconstruction. The project miscarried, as Wren’s proposals proved to be unrealisable. But the new building for St. Paul’s and fifty-one further churches were essentially his works.

The official comparison of the scheme with St. Peter’s meant that the question of the plans for the new St. Paul’s was settled. The so-called “great model” of 1673 is on the same scale as Michelangelo’s domed central structure, although after countless changes to the plans, a traditional nave structure was built with its famous gigantic, double-shelled dome (111 meters high) over the crossing.

The main fa�ade combines double-storey pairs of Corinthian columns with flanking towers (not built until 1706-08). The prevailing style is one of academic classicism. In spite of many conceptual alterations resulting from the long period of construction, St. Paul’s, and particularly its dome, became a frequently imitated model for English church building.

The picture shows the west fa�ade of the cathedral.

View the ground plan of St. Paul’s Cathedral, London.

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Exterior view

The Trinity College Library in Cambridge is a variation on the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice.

The picture shows the court of the library building.

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Exterior view

Even the most ambitious of Wren’s churches, St Stephen Walbrook, has a very plain exterior. Inside it is notable for its perfect geometrical regularity, its craftsmanship of the highest standards, and a complex and ambiguous plan which combines basilican and both Latin and Greek cruciform elements with a centralizing dome rising from eight equal arches supported on columns. The exceptional character of St Stephen Walbrook may be partly due to the patronage of the Grocers’ Company, but it can hardly be accidental that it was designed (the only church begun in 1672) while Wren was concerned with the new and much grander centralized design for St Paul’s that led to the Great Model of 1673.

Restoration work at St Stephen Walbrook, completed in 1987, included the recovery of the original fenestration by opening blocked windows, structural reinforcement and the installation of an altar designed by Henry Moore under the centre of the dome. This concept was inevitably outside the limits of 17th-century Anglican liturgy or seating arrangements; however, the entire loss of its original box pews and other permanent seating had already effectively reduced the interior to the unfurnished spaciousness shown, albeit fictitiously, in 18th-century prints, and the altar in fact complements the dome without destroying the original complexity of readings of the interior.

View the ground plan of St Stephen Walbrook, London.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

Even the most ambitious of Wren’s churches, St Stephen Walbrook, has a very plain exterior. Inside it is notable for its perfect geometrical regularity, its craftsmanship of the highest standards, and a complex and ambiguous plan which combines basilican and both Latin and Greek cruciform elements with a centralizing dome rising from eight equal arches supported on columns. The exceptional character of St Stephen Walbrook may be partly due to the patronage of the Grocers’ Company, but it can hardly be accidental that it was designed (the only church begun in 1672) while Wren was concerned with the new and much grander centralized design for St Paul’s that led to the Great Model of 1673.

Restoration work at St Stephen Walbrook, completed in 1987, included the recovery of the original fenestration by opening blocked windows, structural reinforcement and the installation of an altar designed by Henry Moore under the centre of the dome. This concept was inevitably outside the limits of 17th-century Anglican liturgy or seating arrangements; however, the entire loss of its original box pews and other permanent seating had already effectively reduced the interior to the unfurnished spaciousness shown, albeit fictitiously, in 18th-century prints, and the altar in fact complements the dome without destroying the original complexity of readings of the interior.

General view
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General view

In 1666 the Great Fire destroyed London. Charles II commissioned Wren and his colleagues to submit proposals for the reconstruction. The project miscarried, as Wren’s proposals proved to be unrealisable. But the new building for St. Paul’s and fifty-one further churches were essentially his works.

The official comparison of the scheme with St. Peter’s meant that the question of the plans for the new St. Paul’s was settled. The so-called “great model” of 1673 is on the same scale as Michelangelo’s domed central structure, although after countless changes to the plans, a traditional nave structure was built with its famous gigantic, double-shelled dome (111 meters high) over the crossing.

The main fa�ade combines double-storey pairs of Corinthian columns with flanking towers (not built until 1706-08). The prevailing style is one of academic classicism. In spite of many conceptual alterations resulting from the long period of construction, St. Paul’s, and particularly its dome, became a frequently imitated model for English church building.

View the ground plan of St. Paul’s Cathedral, London.

Interior view
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Interior view

The picture shows the Queen’s Drawing Room.

Interior view
Interior view by

Interior view

In 1666 the Great Fire destroyed London. Charles II commissioned Wren and his colleagues to submit proposals for the reconstruction. The project miscarried, as Wren’s proposals proved to be unrealisable. But the new building for St. Paul’s and fifty-one further churches were essentially his works.

The official comparison of the scheme with St. Peter’s meant that the question of the plans for the new St. Paul’s was settled. The so-called “great model” of 1673 is on the same scale as Michelangelo’s domed central structure, although after countless changes to the plans, a traditional nave structure was built with its famous gigantic, double-shelled dome (111 meters high) over the crossing.

The main fa�ade combines double-storey pairs of Corinthian columns with flanking towers (not built until 1706-08). The prevailing style is one of academic classicism. In spite of many conceptual alterations resulting from the long period of construction, St. Paul’s, and particularly its dome, became a frequently imitated model for English church building.

The picture shows the nave looking east.

View the ground plan of St. Paul’s Cathedral, London.

Interior view
Interior view by

Interior view

Even the most ambitious of Wren’s churches, St Stephen Walbrook, has a very plain exterior. Inside it is notable for its perfect geometrical regularity, its craftsmanship of the highest standards, and a complex and ambiguous plan which combines basilican and both Latin and Greek cruciform elements with a centralizing dome rising from eight equal arches supported on columns. The exceptional character of St Stephen Walbrook may be partly due to the patronage of the Grocers’ Company, but it can hardly be accidental that it was designed (the only church begun in 1672) while Wren was concerned with the new and much grander centralized design for St Paul’s that led to the Great Model of 1673.

Restoration work at St Stephen Walbrook, completed in 1987, included the recovery of the original fenestration by opening blocked windows, structural reinforcement and the installation of an altar designed by Henry Moore under the centre of the dome. This concept was inevitably outside the limits of 17th-century Anglican liturgy or seating arrangements; however, the entire loss of its original box pews and other permanent seating had already effectively reduced the interior to the unfurnished spaciousness shown, albeit fictitiously, in 18th-century prints, and the altar in fact complements the dome without destroying the original complexity of readings of the interior.

View the ground plan of St Stephen Walbrook, London.

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