Charles Cameron (architect)

Charles Cameron
Oil-painting signed by R. Hunter, Dublin, 1773, previously in the Townshend collection, Raynham Hall
Bornc. 1745
Died19 March 1812 (aged 66/67)
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsMain palace in Pavlovsk
Cameron's Gallery and Cold Baths in Tsarskoye Selo
ProjectsParks of Pavlovsk, Sophia and Tsarskoye Selo
Aminov Portrait, c. 1809

Charles Cameron (1745 – 19 March 1812) was a Scottish architect who made an illustrious career at the court of Catherine II of Russia. Cameron, a practitioner of early neoclassical architecture, was the chief architect of Tsarskoye Selo and Pavlovsk palaces and the adjacent new town of Sophia from his arrival in Russia in 1779 to Catherine's death in 1796. Cameron concentrated exclusively on country palaces and landscape gardens. Twice dismissed by Paul of Russia during the Battle of the Palaces, Cameron enjoyed a brief revival of his career under Alexander I in 1803–1805. All his indisputable tangible works "can be encompassed in a day's tour".[1]

Cameron's British neoclassicism was an isolated episode in Russian architecture, then dominated by Italian artists (Francesco Rastrelli, Antonio Rinaldi, Giacomo Quarenghi, Vincenzo Brenna, Carlo Rossi, and many others).[2] According to his first biographer Georgy Lukomsky, "Cameron remains one of the greatest exponents of British taste and British Art abroad, and if he has been so completely forgotten in his own country, it would seem only right to rectify this omission".[2]

Howard Colvin ranked Cameron "one of the major urban architects of the eighteenth century ... an accomplished designer and decorator in a neoclassical style that has affinities with that of Robert Adam. His style is sufficiently individual to exonerate him from the imputation of being merely an imitator...[3] Although still a Palladian, Cameron was a pioneer of Greek Revival in Russia."[4] Apart from the well-researched Catherinian period (1779–1796), Cameron's life story remains poorly documented, not in the least due to Cameron's own efforts to shake off the bad reputation he had earned in the 1770s in London

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference CR297 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b Lukomsky 1943, part 1
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference CD212 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Colvin 2008, p. 213