C1924

Bungarribee Eastern Creek N.S.W.

Scarce, c.20th collotype of Bungarribee, Eastern Creek by William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955) “regarded as one of the most outstanding Australian architects of the twentieth century“. Bungarribee House at Eastern Creek was built in 1863 for John Campbell (1808–1886), a prominent pastoralist and … Read Full Description

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Details

Full Title:

Bungarribee Eastern Creek N.S.W.

Date:

C1924

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Collotype

Image Size: 

245mm 
x 323mm

Paper Size: 

252mm 
x 330mm
AUTHENTICITY
Bungarribee Eastern Creek N.S.W. - Antique Print from 1924

Guaranteed Vintage Item
dated:

1924

Description:

Scarce, c.20th collotype of Bungarribee, Eastern Creek by William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955) “regarded as one of the most outstanding Australian architects of the twentieth century“.

Bungarribee House at Eastern Creek was built in 1863 for John Campbell (1808–1886), a prominent pastoralist and member of the Legislative Council of New South Wales.  Campbell acquired the Bungarribee estate in the mid-nineteenth century and commissioned the construction of the substantial Victorian Regency homestead as the centrepiece of his pastoral operations on the Cumberland Plain. The house was erected during a period of agricultural prosperity in the district, when large estates supplied meat, grain and produce to the expanding Sydney market. The residence remained in the Campbell family for several generations and became one of the notable rural homesteads of western Sydney before the surrounding area gradually transitioned from pastoral land to suburban and industrial use.

In 1922 Wilson finished his drawings for his series Old Colonial Architecture, sold his house Purulia and went to England and Europe where he sought the best printmakers and printers. The plates were executed by Max Jaffe in Vienna.

From: Hardy Wilson, Old Colonial Architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania.

Collections:
National Library Australia: Bib ID: 1730050
State Library New South Wales: Call Numbers: Z/X720.99/3
State Library Victoria: Record ID 994776583607636
State Library Queensland: Recor ID 99501954702061
State Library South Australia: Special Collection: 724 W754 d
State Library of Western Australia: Call number: EF0191
National Gallery Australia: Legacy id 157373
Getty Museum Los Angeles: ID/Accession Number 85-B9906

William Hardy Wilson (1881 - 1951)

Hardy Wilson, architect, was the second of four surviving sons of William Joshua Wilson, agent, and his wife Jessie Elizabeth. Living with his parents at Burwood, Wilson attended Newington College (1893-98) and passed the junior public examination. From 1899 to 1904 he was articled to Harry Kent of Kent and Budden, architects, and attended Sydney Technical College at night. He qualified in 1904 and was president of the Architectural Students' Society. Wilson designed mainly homes and small commercial buildings. Having been impressed by the Colonial Revival style in the US, he sought to do something similar in Australia. He is regarded as a key practitioner of the Inter-War Georgian Revival style Regarded as one of the great Australian architects. William Hardy Wilson was born at Campbelltown, in 1881, the great grandson of early NSW colonist Caleb Wilson. He attended Newington College, where he captained the First XV Rugby team and was awarded the School Drawing Prize. He went on to study at the Sydney Technical College. After early work with architects Kent and Budden, Wilson embarked on a long period abroad in 1905 during which he developed his artistic technique. He travelled extensively in Italy and the United States, and when he returned in Sydney in 1910, he was primed to embark on his architectural career proper. Wilson completed a string of houses in Sydney over the coming years, including Merion, for artist Lionel Lindsay, in Wahroonga (1911); Eryldene, also on the upper North Shore in Gordon for the linguist, literary scholar and camelia enthusiast E.B. Waterhouse (1913); and his own house, Purulia, Wahroonga (1916). In 1912, Wilson began a decade-long project to record the early colonial architecture of Australia, which would eventually culminate in the publication of Old Colonial Architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania in 1924.

View other items by William Hardy Wilson

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