Artist: Sir Ernest George (English, 1839-1922)
Title: Orleans… The Church of St. Jacques
Medium: Original Hand Pulled Copper Plate Etching on Wove Paper
Signature: Signed and Titled in the plate.
Dimensions: Image Size 6 5/8 x 8 5/8 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 16 x 18 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
From the ancient city of Orleans, considerably rebuilt and modernized, chosen for this etching the beautiful fragment of St. Jacques. This ruined church has a noble doorway in flamboyant Githic, but the facade was apparently never completed. Looking up the old street is seen the tower of the former Hotel de Ville, now the Musee, a picturesque building of the time of Charles VIII. It is richely stored with carvings and relics of the curious houses that have made way for the straight modern streets. The historic bridge is gone, together with most of its former city, but there is still, about our Church of St, Jacques, and old quarter, where narrow streets run between timber houses that well nigh meet across the way, and show their fronts molded. beams and carved stones. These houses recall pleasant and picturesque memories of former days; among these may be noted the house of Agnes Sorel, which remains an interesting example of its style; and the houses associated with the Maid of Orleans and with Diane de Poitiers.
Sir Ernest George was an English architect, landscape and architectural watercolour painter, and etcher. His London office was once called “The Eton of architects’ offices”. His pupils included Herbert Baker, Guy Dawber, John Bradshaw Gass, Edwin Lutyens and Ethel Charles. In the 1870s in partnership with Harold Peto, George designed houses in London for the Cadogan Estate in Chelsea and Kensington, and a number of country houses. In 1881 they designed Stoodleigh Court at Tiverton for Thomas Carew. In 1891 they designed an extension to West Dean House for William James, creating the Oak Room, now Oak Hall in West Dean College. Between 1870 and 1911 George designed several houses with his former pupil, Alfred B. Yeates. In New Zealand, which he never visited, he designed the Theomin family house Olveston in Dunedin which was built 1904-07. He was also responsible for the current Southwark Bridge (1921), and the Memorial to Heroic Self Sacrifice in London’s Postman’s Park. He served as president of the Royal Institute of British Architects from 1908 to 1910. In the late 19th century, George trained Ethel Charles, the first woman to be elected a member of the Royal Institute of British Architects. George’s residence at 17 Bartholomew St, London Borough of Southwark is commemorated with a Southwark Council blue plaque. George painted in England, Belgium, Holland, France, Germany and Italy.