• Source: Leslie Wilkinson
    • Leslie Wilkinson , FRAIA, (12 October 1882 – 20 September 1973) was a UK-born Australian architect and academic. He was the founding dean of the faculty of architecture at University of Sydney in 1920 to 1947. A traditionalist, he is known for residential and church architecture.


      Early life and education


      Leslie Wilkinson was born on 12 October 1882 at New Southgate, Middlesex, England, the younger son of commercial clerk Edward Henry Wilkinson.
      In his early years, he studied at St Edward's School, Oxford and at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, winning several awards, including the touring scholarship (1904,1905) that allowed him to travel to France, Italy, Spain and England. It was in these early years that his love of Mediterranean and Italian Renaissance architecture developed. In 1903, Wilkinson had become assistant to noted architect James Gibson, while also studying and entering competitions.


      Career


      Wilkinson was an associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1907. In 1908, he became Professor F. M. Simpson's assistant at University College in London and later became assistant professor. He enlisted in the Territorial Force during World War I.
      In 1918, he was appointed to the new chair of architecture (within the faculty of science) at the University of Sydney. Arriving later that year, he threw his energy into the creation of a faculty of architecture; succeeding in 1920, he became the first dean of the school that became known as the University of Sydney School of Architecture, Design and Planning.
      Throughout his time in Australia, Wilkinson also continued to practise as an architect. He was appointed architect for the University of Sydney in 1919, where he contributed to the university's master plan (inspired by the Walter Burley Griffin's previous unused 1915 campus masterplan), as well as a number of building projects. He also designed over 30 commissions for houses and flats, and some church designs.
      In 1933, he became president of the newly formed New South Wales state chapter of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects (RAIA), and in 1937 was a founding member of Robert Menzies' anti-modernist Australian Academy of Artists.


      Awards and recognition



      Royal Academy of Art Silver Medal, 1903
      Royal Academy of Art Gold Medal, 1905
      Sir John Sulman Medal, 1934 and 1942
      Inaugural Royal Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal, 1960
      Honorary Award, University of Sydney, 1970
      In 1961 the RAIA NSW Chapter created a new named annual architecture award, called the Wilkinson Award for residential architecture.
      The Wilkinson Building, which houses the University of Sydney School of Architecture, Design and Planning, was named in his honour.


      Death and legacy


      Wilkinson died on 20 September 1973 in the Sydney suburb of Vaucluse.
      His ideals on architecture as a form of art had strongly influenced both the school and its students. The emphasis on the teaching of philosophy and practice of design was at the time a frontier in architecture education. Wilkinson was never a part of the modern architecture movement. His work, both as a teacher and practising architect, was consistently involved only with traditional architecture, which was inspired by Australian's colonial heritage and Mediterranean architecture. This reflected his training at the Royal Academy of Arts and his study tours in France, Italy, Spain and Great Britain. Wilkinson's influential work is seen in residential and church architecture, and the University of Sydney master plan.


      Notable projects




      = Academic

      =

      Masterplan for the University of Sydney, 1920—1927
      Completion of Edmund Blacket's Gothic Revival Quadrangle, University of Sydney, 1919
      Chemistry Building, University of Sydney, 1923
      Physics Building, University of Sydney, 1926


      = Residential

      =
      Wilkinson Residence, Greenway, 1923
      Verona Residence, Double Bay, 1923
      Silchester, Bellevue Hill, 1930
      Greyleaves, Burradoo, 1934
      Samuel Hordern's Residence, Bellevue Hill, 1936
      Maiala, Warrawee, 1937
      Hazeldean, Cooma, 1937
      Markdale Homestead, Crookwell, 1951


      = Ecclesiastical

      =
      St John's Church of England (now Anglican), Penshurst, Sydney
      St John's Church of England (now Anglican), Maroubra, Sydney
      St Paul's Church, Harris Park, Sydney
      Completion of Blacket's St Michael's Anglican Church, Vaucluse
      Original design of Ss Peter and Paul Cathedral, Dogura, Papua New Guinea, 1932, which was much modified by a local lay worker, Robert Jones


      Publications


      Falkiner, Suzanne (1982). Leslie Wilkinson, A Practical Idealist. Sydney: Valadon Publishing. ISBN 0-9594202-1-5.


      References




      External links


      Honorary Award, University of Sydney, Leslie Wilkinson
      Drawings and Photographs by Leslie Wilkinson, Library of NSW
      "Wilkinson's European sketches and University legacy [News]". University of Sydney. Retrieved 15 June 2019.


      See also


      Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal
      University of Sydney
      University of Sydney School of Architecture, Design and Planning
      Wilkinson Award

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