(Redirected from Colin St. John Wilson)'Sir Colin Alexander St John ("Sandy") Wilson',
FRIBA,
RA, (
14 March 1922 –
14 May 2007) was a
British architect,
lecturer and
author. He spent over 30 years progressing the project to build a new
British Library in
London, originally planned to be built in
Bloomsbury and now completed near
Kings Cross.
Early and private life
Wilson was born in
Cheltenham, the younger son of
Henry Wilson, a
Church of England clergyman who became
Bishop of Chelmsford from 1929. His father was known as the "Red Bishop" as a result of his sympathy for the
Republican cause in the
Spanish Civil War. Wilson was educated at
Felsted School, and he studied history and then architecture at
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge from 1940 to 1942, when he joined the
Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve. He served as a lieutenant in a Communication Squadron of the
Fleet Air Arm in Europe during the
Second World War and then
India. He was
demobilised in 1946, he completed his studies under Sir
Albert Richardson at the
Bartlett School of Architecture at
University College London, graduating as an architect in 1949.
Wilson married twice. First he married Muriel Lavender in 1955, but they were later divorced in 1971. Then he married the architect
Mary Jane Long, a founding partner of
Long & Kentish architects, in 1972; with Long together he has one son and one daughter. Long and Wilson often collaborated on design projects.
Career
After graduating, he worked at the
London County Council architects department from 1950 to 1955, under the directorship of Sir
Leslie Martin, alongside
James Stirling,
Alison and Peter Smithson,
Alan Colquhoun,
Peter Carter, and
William Howell. Wilson was involved with the
Independent Group of artists at the
Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, and he contributed to the seminal "
This is Tomorrow" exhibition at the
Whitechapel Art Gallery in 1956. He worked for a development company for a year before becoming a lecturer in architecture at
Cambridge University in 1956, where Martin had been appointed Professor of Architecture. Wilson met
Finnish architect
Alvar Aalto through Martin and this had a major impact on his following building. He was a Fellow at
Churchill College, Cambridge from 1962 to 1971. He retired from teaching in 1969 to
concentrate on his architectural practice.
As well as teaching together, Wilson and Martin also practised together as architects from offices in
Cambridge, designing
Harvey Court at
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, which himself argues had an influence on Italian rationalist architecture, especially that of
Aldo Rossi, an extension to the School of Architecture in Cambridge, a house for painter
Christopher Cornford in Cambridge, and the Law, English and Statistical Libraries on
Manor Road in
Oxford, and other buildings in Cambridge and London. Wilson designed his own home in Cambridge on
Grantchester Road, now the
Wittgenstein Institute. He was commissioned to design the proposed
Liverpool Civic and Social Centre, but the building was never finished, being deemed "fascist" by the council. He also designed an extension for the
British Museum which was also never realised.

Interior of the British Library, with the smoked glass wall of the King's Library in the background.
In terms of architectural production, Wilson is best-known for designing the current
British Library building in London, began in 1962 and finally completed - after a 35-year history of political wrangles, budget overspending and design problems - in 1997. He described it as his "30-year war". The original scheme would have created a
piazza to the south of the British Museum, but would have required the demolition of a large part of Bloomsbury. After a public protest, a new site was found further north, between
Euston station and
St Pancras station. A design was approved in 1978, but then delayed by the change of government after the
1979 UK general election, and ambitions were reduced amid rising costs. The architecture of the huge building is influenced by several sources: the surrounding Victorian architecture in the
St Pancras area of London and the collegiate architecture of Cambridge University. The use of finely detailed brickwork, multi-layer terraces, interplay of pitched roof elements and gradual stepping up of the entrance are all direct references to Alto, in particular his
Säynätsalo Town Hall. The building was shortlised for the RIBA
Stirling Prize in 1998.
Wilson returned to Cambridge to become Professor of Architecture in 1975, stepping into shoes vacated by the early death of William Howell. He was a Fellow at
Pembroke College, Cambridge from 1977 to his death in 2007. He retired in 1989, becoming a
professor emeritus. He became a trustee of the
Tate Gallery in 1974, and a trustee of the
National Gallery in 1977, retiring from both positions in 1980. He was a member of the
Royal Institute of British Architects and the
Royal Academy. He was knighted in 1998 for services to architecture, and was an Honorary Fellow at Churchill College from 1998 to 2007. He received honorary doctorates from the universities of Cambridge,
Essex and
Sheffield. He was a
visiting professor at
Yale four times (1960, 1964, 1983 and 2000) and at
MIT from 1970 to 1972.
He published two theoretical works, ''Architectural Reflections'' in 1992 and ''The Other Tradition of Modern Architecture'' in 1995, and ''The Artist at Work'', on
Michael Andrews and
William Coldstream, in 1999.
More recently, Wilson and Long & Kentish designed the new wing of
Pallant House Gallery in
Chichester, England, which opened in June 2006. The unashamedly modern block stands next to the original gallery, housed in a
Grade 1 listed Queen Anne townhouse, was shortlisted for RIBA awards in 2007, and won the 2007
Gulbenkian Prize.
[1] Wilson also donated his share of his collection of over 400 works of art to the gallery (owned jointly with his second wife). His collection, worth £5m, included works by
Michael Andrews,
Peter Blake,
David Bomberg,
Patrick Caulfield,
Lucian Freud,
Richard Hamilton,
R. B. Kitaj,
Eduardo Paolozzi and
Walter Sickert. Many of the works were acquired directly from the artists, who were friends of Wilson: indeed, he designed homes for several.
An extension to the
British Library opened in 2007, shortly before his death. He was survived by his second wife, and their son and daughter.
External links
★
Pallant House Gallery
★
★
The Wilson Collection
★
★
A selection of the works donated by Wilson
★
British Library's architect dies,
BBC News,
15 May 2007
★
Biography from the
Royal Academy
★
Portrait at the
National Portrait Gallery
★
Statement on British Library website
References
★ Sarah Menin and Stephen Kite, ''An Architecture of Invitation: Colin St John Wilson.'' Ashgate Publishing, 2005.
★
Obituary, ''
The Guardian'',
16 May 2007
★
Obituary, ''
The Daily Telegraph'',
16 May 2007
★
Obituary, ''
The Times'',
17 May 2007
★
Obituary, ''
The Independent'',
19 May 2007
★
Biography from
Pallant House Gallery