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Newgate Gaol, Dance's first major scheme carried out as architect to the City of London, is his best-known building. Its massive, rusticated, blank walls and low doors with festoons of shackles above them conveyed the nature and purpose of retributive justice and imprisonment. Appropriate character or architecture parlante and 'the poetry of architecture' are important qualities in Dance's work. He never put these ideas in writing and we rely largely on Joseph Farington's diary for verbal clues. For example, an entry of 3 March 1797 relates to Edmund Burke's essay on 'the Sublime and Beautiful' which Dance considered 'a very excellent work. - That part on taste the best He has ever seen on the subject'. In Burke's sense of exciting ideas of pain, danger and terror Newgate was indeed 'sublime' as was, to a lesser degree, St Luke's Hospital for Lunatics, another place of confinement, larger still than Newgate but more simply built of brick with an austere and uniform round-arched rhythm. Both buildings 'announced their purposes by their appropriate appearance, and no stranger has occasion to inquire for what they are intended'. (Humphrey Repton quoted by Kalman p.109).
Composed in plan and elevation into blocky masses that anticipated later 18th-century tendencies, Newgate was aesthetically advanced though its layout was superseded by Jeremy Bentham's radical planning. Accommodation and facilities were more innovatory in the later Giltspur Street Compter which responded more strongly to the ideas of John Howard, penal reformer and friend of Dance. The planning and many of the details of St Luke's Hospital were forward-looking and were taken up in asylum design.
George Dance the Elder's influence should not be overlooked. He had built the first St Luke's and had provided earlier, unexecuted designs for Newgate, both of which provided a sound springing board. His son's success in tacking two major buildings so early in his career must owe something to a maturity and professionalism developed within the paternal home and office as well as an expensive architectural education.
Sir John Soane's collection includes some 30,000 architectural, design and topographical drawings which is a very important resource for scholars worldwide. His was the first architect’s collection to attempt to preserve the best in design for the architectural profession in the future, and it did so by assembling as exemplars surviving drawings by great Renaissance masters and by the leading architects in Britain in the 17th and 18th centuries and his near contemporaries such as Sir William Chambers, Robert Adam and George Dance the Younger. These drawings sit side by side with 9,000 drawings in Soane’s own hand or those of the pupils in his office, covering his early work as a student, his time in Italy and the drawings produced in the course of his architectural practice from 1780 until the 1830s.
Browse (via the vertical menu to the left) and search results for Drawings include a mixture of Concise catalogue records – drawn from an outline list of the collection – and fuller records where drawings have been catalogued in more detail (an ongoing process).
Contents of Prison, courts and a lunatic hospital (5)
- Newgate Gaol, Newgate Street, City of London, 1768-c.1813 (25)
- Newgate Sessions House, Old Bailey, City of London, c.1769 (1)
- St Luke's Hospital for Lunatics, Old Street, Finsbury, Islington, London, 1777, 1781-2 and c.1794-1811 Competition design (by an unidentified architect), preliminary design by James Peacock?, contract drawings, specification and drawings of building as executed (32)
- Giltspur Street Compter (Debtors' Prison), City of London, 1787 Design not as executed, contract drawings for crenellated design, revised designs and working drawings (37)
- Prison, St James's Street, St Peter Port, Guernsey, Channel Islands, 1807 (1)