William Wardell: Building with conviction

29 Sep 2010

By The Record

William Wardell: Building with Conviction
By AG Evans
Now Available
ISBN 9781921421433 (paperback)
Paperback, 314 pages
Over 60 Black and White Photos
Paperback $39.95 + postage/handling
Hardback   $49.95 + postage/handling

 
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Born into lowly circumstances in London’s East End in 1823, WILLIAM WILKINSON WARDELL became one of Australia’s greatest architects whose crowning works are his two Cathedrals, St Mary’s in Sydney and St Patrick’s in Melbourne.
As well as being a leading exponent of Gothic Revival architecture of the 19th century, he served for a period as Chief Architect in the Victorian Public Works Department where he stamped his character and his high standards on many of Melbourne’s best-loved public buildings including his own design, Government House.
Wardell was a contemporary and devoted admirer of Pugin.
Both were converts to the Catholic Faith and both shared a deep religious conviction in the superiority of Gothic architecture for Church building.
As a young architect, he enjoyed the friendship and intimacy of Charles Dickens and other prominent writers, artists, and actors, but he feared for his health in 1858 due to the wretched climatic conditions that claimed the lives of thousands of Londoners at that time.
To the sorrow of his friends, Wardell chose to sail with his family for Melbourne, lured by the climate and the urgent need for new churches for the burgeoning population. During his early years in Australia, Wardell suffered sectarian animosity and jealousy among members of his profession. Forced unfairly to leave Victoria in 1878, he was welcomed in Sydney where he was honoured and revered as a leader of his profession.
At his death aged 76, a newspaper stated: ‘He closed his life of noble labours, a life crowded with artistic triumphs in a manner in keeping with the modest gentleness of his whole career.’
In this first major biography of Wardell, Evans reveals for the first time his early life and influences at home in a workhouse, his apprenticeship at sea, and his work in England and Scotland where he was responsible for over twenty much admired churches, schools, and private houses.
His architectural legacy in Australia is rich and varied but it is for his two monumental Cathedrals that he is best remembered. He lavished much of his time, his love and his exacting standards on each of them simultaneously so that now they are emblematic of their cities and judged by architectural historians as among the finest examples of the Gothic style anywhere in the world.

The Conscious Stone: “This is a book which stirs the imagination and emotions. It repays more than one reading.”- Elizabeth Jolley

Fanatic Heart: “Writing with real literary flair and lively authorial imagination, [Evans] has produced the best biography we are ever likely to have.’
- New England Quarterly

AG (Tony) EVANS was a producer with the ABC for many years, working as a presenter, reporter/writer and producer for television and radio. In 1989, he left the ABC to concentrate on freelance writing. His first published book, The Conscious Stone, a biography of the priest-architect, John Cyril Hawes, won the Western Australian Premier’s Literary Award for non-fiction in 1985. Later books included Fanatic Heart, the biography of John Boyle O’Reilly, short-listed for the National Biography Prize; and CY O’Connor, His Life and Legacy, published in 2001. Evans lives in Western Australia.