Furniture design of Robert Adam

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Quick Facts
Born:
July 3, 1728, Kirkcaldy, Fife, Scot.
Died:
March 3, 1792, London, Eng.
Movement / Style:
Gothic Revival
Neoclassical art

As a designer of furniture, too, Adam played a leading role and was prolific, turning his hand to everything from organ cases and sedan chairs to saltcellars and door fittings. The furniture style he evolved, popularized by the cabinetmaker George Hepplewhite, was always meant to harmonize with the rest of the home. It is one of the outstanding features of an Adam interior that everything, even the smallest detail, was part of the unified scheme created by the architect.

Later works

Robert Adam designed and built a number of romantic neo-Gothic castles, mostly dating from the 1780s, in Scotland. The most important of these is Culzean (1777–92), Ayrshire, for the earls of Cassilis. Another neo-Gothic work is the interior of Alnwick Castle (c. 1770–80; destroyed in the 19th century), Northumberland.

Toward the end of his life, Adam built the Register House (1772–92), Edinburgh, in which he realized the conception of a monumental domed hall within a square, envisaged at Syon some years earlier. In 1789 he designed the University of Edinburgh, whose entrance front is perhaps his most successful exterior. At Fitzroy Square (1790–94), London, and Charlotte Square (1791–1807), Edinburgh, he experimented for the last time with the introduction of movement into street architecture.

Adam was buried in Westminster Abbey. The bulk of the nearly 9,000 drawings he left were purchased by the architect Sir John Soane in 1833 and are in Sir John Soane’s Museum, London.

Sandra Millikin