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- 1778
- Other Years: 1779 and later
It is difficult to place in a correct sequence the preliminary drawings (SM 45/1/12, SM volume 42/120, SM volume 42/162 recto and verso, SM volume 42/172 recto and SM 45/1/13 recto) that follow and there must have been many more first thoughts. Of these drawings, SM volume 42/120, SM volume 42/172 recto and SM 45/1/13 recto are in George Dance's hand. SM volume 42/120 was probably made before Soane's departure and taken by him to Italy. SM volume 42/172 recto is an intermediate design while SM 45/1/13 recto is so highly developed and close to the final design that it must have been sent to Soane (there are fold marks) after he arrived (the drawing is dated by Soane 10 August 1778).
An assumption might be made that all of the surviving preliminary drawings by both Soane and Dance were made in London. Except that SM volume 42/162 recto and verso (rough plans) has a note by Soane about the bad road between Capua and Caserta which implies that it was made in Italy. What cannot be disregarded is that George Dance's SM 45/1/13 recto has all the elements of the final design sent by Soane to the Royal Academy. Soane was left to choose between the alternative forms of the wings and the treatment of the principal elevation and only the interior as shown in the section, varied from Dance's design. Soane seems to have had help with the drawing up of the final scheme exhibited at the Royal Academy (SM 45/1/35, SM 13/2/5 and SM 13/2/4) since the elevation and section are very finely rendered and shaded while the plan has the earliest example of sans serif lettering among his drawings.
The term 'Senate House' perhaps came from an 'anonymous but widely circulated pamphlet of 1771 entitled Critical Observations on the Buildings and Improvements of London ... that contained a proposal for rebuilding [Westminster] Palace as a 'Senate House'. (S.Sawyer, Delusions of National Grandeur', Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, sixth series, volume 13, 2003, p.240).
Related drawings at the Victoria and Albert Museum: see P. du Prey, Sir John Soane,1985, in series of 'Catalogues of the architectural drawings in the Victoria and Albert Museum', catalogue 9-11.
Literature. P.du Prey, John Soane's architectural education 1753-80, 1977, pp.126-151; P.du Prey, John Soane: the making of an architect, 1982, pp.168-72; D.Watkin, ‘Sir John Soane’s Grand Tour: its impact on his architecture and his collections’ in C.Hornsby (ed), The Impact of Italy: the Grand Tour and Beyond, British School at Rome, 2000, pp.101-11; J. Lever, 'The Soane-Dance collaboration, 1771-1799, Architectural History, volume 53, 2010, pp.163-190.
Jill Lever, November 2004
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 Preliminary designs, some by George Dance, final design exhibited at the Royal Academy, record drawing, and perspectives by J.M.Gandy and George Bailey, for a British Senate House 1778-1779 and later (16)
- [1] First design based on an octagon, made before 18 March 1778
- [2] Design for a circular chamber, 70 feet in diameter
- [3] Preliminary design by George Dance, made before 18 March 1778
- [4] Rough designs, 1778
- [5] 5 Intermediate rough design by George Dance, 1778
- [6] Penultimate design on an elliptical plan and with alternative wings and elevational treatment, by George Dance, 1778
- [7] Final design exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1779
- [8] Final design exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1779
- [9] Final design exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1779
- [10] Record drawing
- [11] Record drawing
- [12] Record drawing
- [13] Record drawing
- [14] Record drawing
- [15] Drawing made for exhibition at the Royal Academy by J.M.Gandy, 1812
- [16] Drawing made for exhibition at the Royal Academy by George Bailey, 1836