Edis was born in Huntingdon to Emma and Robert Edis, also an architect.[3] His sister was the preacher Isabella Reaney,[4] his brother was Arthur Wellesley Edis, a gynaecologist,[5] and his niece through Arthur was the photographer Olive Edis.[6]
Although his early work was Gothic, Edis later became a proponent of the Queen Anne style of baroque revival architecture. He worked mostly on private houses and public buildings, although he did design a few churches.[7]
He later became involved in the Aesthetic Movement of decorative arts and in furniture design, and delivered a series of Cantor lectures on the subject at the Royal Society of Arts. These formed the basis of two books: Decoration and Furniture of Town Houses (1881) and Healthy Furniture and Decoration (1884).[1][8] Combining principles of Aestheticism with the Sanitary Movement, Edis delivered a lecture during the 1884 International Health Exhibition calling for more artistic designs within hygienic interior objects.[9]
He built a studio on Church Street, Sheringham, for his nieces the photographers Olive and Katharine Edis. It was their first studio and had a glass roof to allow in natural daylight which became an important aspect of their trademark style.[6]
Edis had a long association with the Volunteer Force and its successor the Territorial Force. In 1868 he received a commission in the Artists' Rifles.[12] He went on to be the regiment's commanding officer from 1883 to November 1902,[13][14][15] and subsequently held the office of honorary colonel from 1902 until his death (he continued when the regiment was reorganized as part of the Territorial Force in 1908).[2][16] He designed the unit's drill hall at Duke's Road, off Euston Road, Camden (now The Place, home of the Contemporary Dance Trust).[17]
^ abOlive Edis; Alistair Murphy; Elizabeth Elmore (2017). Fishermen & kings: the photography of Olive Edis (Second ed.). Norwich. ISBN978-0-903101-88-2. OCLC1137104261.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^"Architects and Artists D-E". Sussex Parish Churches. A primary source of information on churches in East and West Sussex. Archived from the original on 8 November 2011.
^"Robert William Edis". Designer Biographies. Haslam and Whiteway. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
^International Health Exhibition (1884). The Health Exhibition literature. London: Printed and published for the Executive Council of the International Health Exhibition, and for the Council of the Society of Arts, by William Clowes and Sons.