Shrewsbury
An Architect's Eye - A Retrospective Exhibition of work by Architect & Artist James St. Clair Wade
An exhibition by the artist and award-winning architect James St. Clair Wade (Db 1976-81) was the centre piece of Old Salopian Day this year. It included sketch books from his time which School which offered unique insight to his development as an artist.
James was educated at Shrewsbury School and studied architecture at St. John's College, Cambridge and Harvard.
As a student, he worked for Arrol and Snell in Shrewsbury. He produced the concept designs for Carline Fields, a sheltered housing development on the banks of the Severn, which was later selected for inclusion in the Prince of Wales's A Vision of Britain (1989).
After qualification, he worked for eight years at Nicholas Hare Architects in London building up experience through a wide range of commercial and educational projects, including new boarding houses at Leighton Park School in Reading and Benenden School in Kent.
In 1996 he moved back to Shrewsbury and rejoined Arrol and Snell Architects as a senior architect, remaining with them for over twenty years. During this time he has been involved in numerous conservation and new build projects ranging from cottages to country houses and rural parish churches to cathedrals.
His new classical house, The Mount, is one of the few new buildings in Shropshire to be listed in the latest edition of Pevsner's The Buildings of England (2006) and his cloistered design for the Trinity Centre, a new church hall at Meole Brace near Shrewsbury, was awarded the EASA President's Award in 2008. His conservation work has also been recognised with the SPAB John Betjeman Award (2005) and a Georgian Group Award (Best Restoration of a Church, 2010), both for an extended programme of repairs at St. Alkmund's Church in Shrewsbury.
As an accomplished artist and draughtsman, he has illustrated several books and contributed a regular series of caricatures to Shooting Times. In April 2019 he began work on an ambitious project to record the historic streetscape of Shrewsbury in a series of architectural views allowing the whole length of each street to be viewed simultaneously This is called the Shrewsbury Streetscape Project.
How to visit the exhibition
The exhibition will be available during Old Salopian Day on Saturday 30th September.
After that, please get in touch with Lucy Caddel, Head of Art, to arrange a time to view the exhibition.
Students and staff can visit at any time.