Deane and Woodward

E831398

Deane and Woodward was a prominent 19th-century Irish architectural partnership known for its influential Gothic Revival designs, especially for university and ecclesiastical buildings.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Deane and Woodward canonical 1

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf architectural firm
architectural partnership
activeInCentury 19th century
architecturalStyle Gothic Revival
basedIn Cork (through Deane family connections) NERFINISHED
Dublin NERFINISHED
collaboratedWith O’Shea brothers (stone carvers) NERFINISHED
Ruskinian circle of critics and patrons NERFINISHED
commissionedBy Queen’s College Cork NERFINISHED
Trinity College Dublin NERFINISHED
University of Oxford NERFINISHED
country Ireland NERFINISHED
designCharacteristics polychromatic stonework
rich carved ornament
structural expression of materials
use of naturalistic foliage carving
era Victorian era
field architecture
genre Gothic Revival architecture
hasInfluenceOn development of university campus planning in Ireland
ornamental stone carving traditions in 19th-century Ireland
hasPart office of Benjamin Woodward
office of Thomas Newenham Deane NERFINISHED
heritageStatusOfWorks many works are protected or listed buildings
influenced later Victorian Gothic architects in Britain and Ireland
influencedBy John Ruskin NERFINISHED
languageOfWork English
location Dublin NERFINISHED
movement High Victorian Gothic NERFINISHED
notableClient Irish professional and academic elites
notableFor ecclesiastical buildings
university buildings
notableWork Kildare Street Club, Dublin NERFINISHED
Museum Building, Trinity College Dublin NERFINISHED
Oxford University Museum of Natural History NERFINISHED
Queen’s College Cork buildings NERFINISHED
St Ann’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin (work on interior and fittings) NERFINISHED
partner Benjamin Woodward NERFINISHED
Thomas Newenham Deane NERFINISHED
periodOfActivityEnd 1860s
periodOfActivityStart 1850s
regionServed Ireland NERFINISHED
United Kingdom
specialization church architecture
collegiate architecture
usedMaterial ornamental carving in stone
polychrome stone

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Benjamin Woodward memberOf Deane and Woodward