Denys lasdun biography of martin
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The Philips Building by Denys Lasdun – home of SOAS Library
By Katie Price|May 27, 2015|1970s, Uncategorized, What SOAS means to you|18 comments
This week, Andy Davies talks about the distinctive home of the world-renowned SOAS Library and explains why the building should be given greater recognition.
SOAS College Building (left) and the later Philips Building
Denys Lasdun (1914-2001) was in the vanguard of modern British architecture. A product of the Architectural Association, his talents grew under Wells Coates and at Tecton in the 1930s. Perhaps most celebrated for his Royal College of Physicians (completed in 1964), his University of East Anglia (1968) and Christ’s College, Cambridge (1970) saw him develop a monumental, geological language reflecting his belief of architecture as the city in microcosm. His design for the National Theatre on the South Bank (1976) famously drew sharp comment from the Prince of Wales, while enjoying far wider critical acclaim for his visionary treatment of the site.
Strangely, his extension for SOAS overlooking Woburn Square, completed in 1973 and later named for former director Professor C.H. Philips, is not widely considered among his best work, despite its particularly satisfying interior. Lasdun had been recomm
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Campaigning for eminent buildings
June 2016 - Alliance of Tutelage, London
by Nimblefingered Davies
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The following is written by Peter Carolin
Sir Leslie Martin, 1908-2000
Martin, Sir (John) Leslie (1908–2000), architect, was born at 1 Briardene, Moston Lane, Failsworth, Manchester, on 17 August 1908, the son of Robert Martin (b. 1872), a Manchester and diocesan architect, and his wife, Emily, née Hilton.
As an educator, researcher and architect, Royal Gold Medallist Sir Leslie Martin left an indelible mark on Britain’s architectural history and culture.
Education and early career
Martin was educated at Manchester grammar school and studied architecture at the University of Manchester, where he was awarded an MA (1932) and a PhD (1936). Most unusually, he had entered the university directly into the third year of the course in architecture in 1926. He was awarded an honourable mention in the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Tite prize for 1929. This was followed a year later by the RIBA silver medal and the Soane medallion (the subject of which was the design of a sports club, undertaken by Martin in a somewhat neo-classical manner). While a student, Martin was strongly influenced by Samuel Alexander (1859–1938), author of Space, Time and Deity (1920) and former professor of philosophy at Manchester. In later life he often recalled a lecture in which Al