John Buonarotti Papworth (24 January 1775 – 16 June 1847) was a British architect, artist and a founder member of the Royal Institute of British Architects.
He adopted the middle name "Buonarotti" in around 1815.[1]
As well as being active in the UK, he designed a monument in Belgium and designed buildings intended for Germany and the USA.
Life
Papworth was born in Marylebone, London, in 1775 to John Papworth and his wife Charlotte (née Searle). He was one of twelve children and the second of six sons. His father described himself as an "architect, plasterer and builder". His background was in decorative plasterwork, and he dominated the trade in London, employing more than 500 men.[2]
At the recommendation of Sir William Chambers he spent two years as a pupil of the architect John Plaw[3] and was then apprenticed to the builder Thomas Wapshott, whose daughter Jane he then married.[4]
John Summerson described Papworth as "one of the most versatile architects and decorative artists of the period".
In London he designed shop fronts[5] (one, for a tea merchant in Ludgate Hill, was in a "Chinese" style)[6] and warehouses, and built or remodelled many villas for middle-class clients in the countryside.[5] At Cheltenham he laid out the Montpellier Estate, and extended the Montpellier Pump Room (1825–26), with a domed rotunda inspired by the Pantheon.[5]
In 1827 William Bullock commissioned Papworth to plan the layout and design various classes of building for a new city to be called "Hygeia" in the United States, on land he had bought stretching about two-and-a-half miles along the Ohio River, opposite Cincinnati. Bullock published the plans, hoping to attract purchasers for the plots, but the scheme came to nothing.[7]
He exhibited at the Royal Academy between 1816 and 1841. His address is given as Bath Place, New Road, London, until 1816, and 10 Caroline Street, Bedford Square, from 1823. In the latter year he is described as "Architect to the King of Wirtemberg", and exhibited a design for a "Palace at Canstadt for the King of Wirtemberg".[8]
In 1838 he became director of the newly established Government School of Design.[9]
He contributed designs to Ackermann's Repository of the Arts for almost 20 years. In addition, he published the following books:
Essay on the Causes of the Dry Rot in Buildings, 1803
Select Views of London, 1816
Rural Residences, 1818, reissued in 1832
Hints on Ornamental Gardening, 1823, reissued around 1826 with an unchanged title page but with some plates labeled in Spanish
Specimens of Decoration in the Italian Style, 1844
Archive
His archive of drawings is in Drawings and Archives Collections of the Royal Institute of British Architects, which has put a number of images on line including illustrations from "Rural Residences".[14]
^"Selected: CO. DONEGAL, KILLYBEGS, CHURCH OF ST CATHERINE (RC)". Dictionary of Irish Architects 1720–1940. Irish Architectural Archive. Retrieved 21 December 2012. Note that this is St Mary's Church of the Visitation, not St Catherine's as claimed in the DIA entry. See also "The Church". Killybegs Parish Church. 2011. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
Graves, Algernon (1906). The Royal Academy: A Complete Dictionary of Contributors from its Foundations in 1769 to 1904. Vol. 6. London: Henry Graves. p. 50.
McHardie, G (1977). The Office of J.B. Papworth. Catalogue of Drawings in the RIBA Collections.
Papworth, Wyatt (1879). John B. Papworth, Architect to the King of Wurtemburg: a Brief Record of his Life and Works. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Summerson, John (1970). Architecture in Britain, 1530 to 1830. Pelican History of Art. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. p. 521.
Welcome to Basildon Park. National Trust. 2009. (information leaflet)
Images of 1818 edition – Rural residences, consisting of a series of designs for cottages, decorated cottages, small villas, and other ornamental buildings – Papworth, John Buonarotti