Sir William Chambers (1722 96), architect and furniture designer, wished to further his career in the 1750s by publishing on architecture. He also became the Prince of Wales' architectural tutor, architect to the office of works, then head of the royal works (comptroller and surveyor-general from 1782). Notably, he remodelled Buckingham House (1762 73) and designed Somerset House (1775 96), but Chambers' reputation rests also on his Treatise on Civil Architecture (1759), which he revised and expanded in 1791 as A Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture. It is regarded as one of...
Sir William Chambers (1722 96), architect and furniture designer, wished to further his career in the 1750s by publishing on architecture. He also bec...
Sir William Chambers (1722 96), architect and furniture designer, wished to further his career in the 1750s by publishing on architecture. He also became the Prince of Wales' architectural tutor, architect to the office of works, then head of the royal works (comptroller and surveyor-general from 1782). Notably, he remodelled Buckingham House (1762 73) and designed Somerset House (1775 96), but Chambers' reputation rests also on his Treatise on Civil Architecture (1759), which he revised and expanded in 1791 as A Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture. It is regarded as one of...
Sir William Chambers (1722 96), architect and furniture designer, wished to further his career in the 1750s by publishing on architecture. He also bec...