Biography
Lists
Also Viewed
Quick Facts
Intro | British architect and artist | |
Places | United Kingdom Great Britain | |
was | Architect Artist | |
Work field | Arts Engineering | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 1 January 1855 | |
Death | 1 January 1939 (aged 84 years) |
Biography
John Bradshaw Gass (18 June 1855 – 3 July 1939) was a British architect and artist.
Biography
Gass was born in Britain. He was a nephew of J. J. Bradshaw, the founder of Bradshaw Gass & Hope. He received the Ashbury Prize for Civil Engineering at Owens College (later Manchester University). He assisted Sir Ernest George in London, before becoming a pupil of his uncle in Bolton in 1880.
In 1882, when Gass became a partner, the firm adopted the style Bradshaw & Gass.
Like Sir Edwin Lutyens, another traditionalist and pupil of Ernest George, Gass designed country houses in period and vernacular styles.
From 1917 to 1925 Gass designed the Methodist College at Medak in Andhra Pradesh, south India; which, like Lutyens’ work at New Delhi, is organised in the grand manner around a central axis.
Gass was also a keen watercolour artist, and first exhibited his work at the Royal Academy in 1879. In later life, when he had less architectural input at Bradshaw Gass & Hope, he frequently travelled and he filled more than twenty albums with his sketches of North Africa and Asia.