Robert Weir Schultz (26 July 1860 – 29 April 1951), later Robert Weir Schultz Weir and known as R. W. S. Weir, was a Scottish Arts and Crafts architect, artist, landscape designer and furniture designer. He did much work on the Isle of Bute. Almost all of his buildings are now category A listed buildings, reflecting the high quality of his work.
Early life and name
He was born in 1860 in Port Glasgow as Robert Weir Schultz, the son of Henry Schultz, a Greenock sugar refiner, and Isabella Small Weir, the daughter of Dr Robert Weir of Galashiels. Due to this family connection, when Henry Schultz died in 1863 the infant Robert was sent to Galashiels to be raised by his aunt Jane, the wife of Dr Alexander Cunningham Tweedie.[1] Of German roots, he was subjected to anti-German hysteria during WWI. He added his mother's maiden name as an additional surname in 1915 and was from then known as Robert W. S. Weir or R. W. S. Weir, thus hiding his German surname.[2]
In 1887, having won the Golden Medal of the Royal Academy,[3] together with the travelling scholarship of £200 that went with it and, with funding supplemented by the Marquess of Bute, who he had met through Robert Rowand Anderson and Dr Edwin Freshfield, he travelled to Italy, Greece and the Near East, in the company of Sidney Barnsley.[4] In 1889, as part of his travels, he became a member of the British School at Athens.
Whilst in practice both Frank Mears and John Greaves trained under Schultz.
In 1912, at the late age of 52, he married Thyra Macdonald. He then created one of the first known barn conversions at Hartley Wintney in Hampshire as their home.
At the onset of the First World War, and further pressured by his wife's role as a councillor, he reversed his name, to obscure his Germanic surname, and became thereafter known as Robert S. Weir. He was elected as the Master of the Art Workers' Guild in 1920.[7] His office ran until he was aged 79 and at the outset of the Second World War he closed the office and passed all remaining work to Troup's office.
The association that Robert Weir Schultz and Sydney Barnsley had with the British School in Athens, which had only been founded in 1886, led to them producing hundreds of drawings and photographs of ancient monuments that they systematically investigated and recorded. Their work was to form the nucleus of “a collection of approximately fifteen hundred drawings and one thousand photographs of major Byzantine monuments of the Mediterranean basin, Italy, Turkey, Greece, as well as Asia Minor and the Near East, dating between 1888 and 1949. The collection, which is today housed at the British School at Athens, is known as the Byzantine Research Fund Archive…”.[9]
The Warburg Institute also has a large collection of photographs by Weir Schultz and Barnsley. In the Annual Report of 2004-2005 for the School of Advanced Study, University of London, it was reported that a large number of glass negatives of Byzantine churches held since the 1940s had been identified as being taken by Robert Weir Schultz and Sidney Barnsley in 1889 and 1890. Their importance is highlighted by the statement “The negatives, which have now been printed, were long thought by Byzantinists to be lost. They provide important evidence about the state of various Greek churches before radical restoration, or in one case before destruction by fire.".[10] In addition, photographs attributed to Weir Schultz and Barnsley, known as the Weir Schultz and Barnsley Collection, are held in the archive of the Conway Library at The Courtauld Institute of Art, London.[11]
^Kalligas, Haris (2000). Twin reflections of a Byzantine city: Monemvasia as seen by Robert Weir Schultz and Sidney H. Barnsley in 1890 in Through the Looking Glass: Byzantium Through British Eyes. Ashgate Publishing Ltd. p. 2. ISBN9781315236063.
^Kotoula, Dimitra (2015). Arts and Crafts in the 'Byzantine': The Greek Connection in Byzantium/Modernism: The Byzantine as Method in Modernity. Brill. pp. 75–101. ISBN9789004292208.