George Gilbert Scott - Gallery of Architectural Work

Gallery of Architectural Work

  • Work house, Louth Lincolnshire (1839)

  • St. Mary's Hanwell, Middlesex (1841)

  • East end, St. Mary's Hanwell, Middlesex (1841)

  • Martyrs' Memorial, Oxford (1841–43)

  • St. Giles Church, Camberwell (1842–44)

  • Reading Gaol, Berkshire (1842–44)

  • Holy Trinity Church, Halstead, Essex (1843–44)

  • St Martin's Zeal, Wiltshire (1845–46)

  • Nikolaikirche, Hamburg, Germany (1845–80), bombed during World War II and now a ruin

  • Cathedral of St.John's, Newfoundland, Canada (1847-1905)

  • Cathedral of St.John's, Newfoundland, Canada (1847-1905)

  • St. Peter's Church, Croydon (1849–51)

  • St. Anne's Alderney (c.1850)

  • St. Barnabas's Church, Weeton, North Yorkshire (1852)

  • St. George's Church, Doncaster, Yorkshire (1853-8)

  • St. George's Church, Doncaster, Yorkshire (1853-8)

  • Lichfield Cathedral, as restored and with fittings by Scott (1855–61) & (1877–81)

  • All Souls', Haley Hill, Halifax (1856–59)

  • Interior looking east, All Souls', Haley Hill, Halifax, Yorkshire (1856–59)

  • Cottages, Ilam, Staffordshire (c.1871)

  • Chapel door, Exeter College, Oxford (1857-9)

  • East end, Chapel, Exeter College, Oxford (1857-9)

  • Kelham Hall, Nottinghamshire (1858–62)

  • Crimea War Memorial, Westminster School, Broad Sanctuary, Westminster (1858)

  • Walton Hall, Warwickshire (c.1858-62)

  • St. Mary's, Edwin Loach, Herefordshire (c.1859)

  • The Chapel, Brighton College (1859)

  • All Saints, Nocton (1860–63)

  • SS. Peter and Paul Church, Buckingham, heavily restored (1860–67)

  • Nave Vault, Bath Abbey (1860–77) (copy of the medieval vault in the chancel)

  • The Chapel, King's College, London (1861–62)

  • Christ Church, Southgate, London (1861–62)

  • Vaughan Library, Harrow School, London (1861-3)

  • Hafodunos Hall, Caernarfonshire (1861–66)

  • Screen from Hereford Cathedral (1862) now in the Victoria and Albert Museum

  • All Saints' Church, Sherbourne, Warwickshire (1862–64)

  • Foreign and Commonwealth Office, London (1862–75)

  • Foreign and Commonwealth Office, London (1862–75)

  • Grand Staircase, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, London (1862–75)

  • Ceiling, Grand Staircase, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, London (1862–75)

  • Looking east, St. John's College Chapel, Cambridge (1863–69)

  • Clifton Hampden Bridge, Oxfordshire (1864)

  • Leeds General Infirmary (1864–70)

  • St. David's Cathedral, Pembrokeshire, showing Scott's west front (1864–76)

  • Albert Memorial, London (1864–76)

  • Central ciborium, Albert Memorial, London (1864–76)

  • Christchurch Cathedral, Christchurch, New Zealand (1864-1904)

  • St. Mary's Church, Norney, Shackleford, Surrey (1865)

  • Former Albert Institute Dundee (1865–69)

  • Former Midland Grand Hotel, St. Pancras Station (1866–76)

  • Roof scape, Former Midland Grand Hotel, St. Pancras Station (1866–76)

  • Former Midland Grand Hotel, St. Pancras Station (1866–76)

  • Detail of decoration in the Train Shed, St. Pancras Station (1866–76)

  • Clock Tower, Former Midland Grand Hotel, St. Pancras Station (1866–76)

  • Reredos high altar, Worcester Cathedral (1867–68)

  • University of Glasgow (1867–70), the spire was added after Scott's death by his son John Oldrid Scott

  • Highclere Church, Hampshire (1869–70)

  • Brownsover Hall, Warwickshire (c.1870)

  • St Mary Abbots Church, Kensington (1870–72)

  • Design for Reichstag, Berlin, not executed (1872)

  • Pulpit, Worcester Cathedral (1873–74)

  • West front, St. Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh (1874–80)

  • East front, St. Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh (1874–80)

  • Grahamstown Cathedral, South Africa (1874–78) & finished (1893)

  • Hall, Bombay University, India (1876)

  • Clarkson Memorial, Wisbech, (1880–82)

  • New Court, Pembroke College, Cambridge (1881)

Read more about this topic:  George Gilbert Scott

Famous quotes containing the words gallery of, gallery and/or work:

    I never can pass by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York without thinking of it not as a gallery of living portraits but as a cemetery of tax-deductible wealth.
    Lewis H. Lapham (b. 1935)

    Each morning the manager of this gallery substituted some new picture, distinguished by more brilliant or harmonious coloring, for the old upon the walls.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Let’s holler and ask him if he won’t prescribe
    For all humanity a complete rest
    From all this wagery. But what’s the use
    Of asking any sympathy of him?
    That class of people don’t know what work is....
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)