From the magazine

Was Sir John Soane one of the first modernists?

The curators at the Sir John Soane's Museum have done an impressive job in marshalling the evidence

John Rattray
Sir John Soane’s design for the conservatory at Pitzhanger Manor, 1810 – drawing by Joseph Michael Gandy ARDON BAR HAMA. © SIR JOHN SOANE’S MUSEUM, LONDON
EXPLORE THE ISSUE 19 April 2025
issue 19 April 2025

Sir John Soane’s story is a good one. Born in 1753 to a bricklayer, at 15 he was apprenticed to George Dance the Younger and at 18 had moved on to Henry Holland. Later came major commissions, a professorship, a knighthood and gold medals. Fame followed. Along the way he added an ‘e’ to his surname and married Eliza Smith, an heiress whose fortune helped him to buy three houses in Lincoln’s Inn Fields as well as the collection that still fills one of them, which he left to posterity as a museum when he died in 1837.

Soane’s son compared...

GIF Image

Disagree with half of it, enjoy reading all of it

TRY A MONTH FREE
Our magazine articles are for subscribers only. Try a month of Britain’s best writing, absolutely free.

Comments

Join the debate, free for a month

Be part of the conversation with other Spectator readers by getting your first month free.

Already a subscriber? Log in