'John Russell Pope' (
April_24,
1874 –
August 27,
1937) was an
architect most known for his designs of the
Jefferson Memorial (completed in 1943) and the West Building of the
National Gallery of Art (completed in 1941) in
Washington, DC.
Pope was born in
New York in 1874, the son of a successful portrait painter. He studied architecture at
Columbia University and graduated in 1894. He received a scholarship to attend the newly-founded
American Academy in Rome, a training ground for the designers of the "
American Renaissance." Pope travelled for two years through
Italy and
Greece, where he studied and sketched and made measured drawings of more Romanesque, Gothic, and Renaissance structures than he did of the remains of ancient buildings. Pope was one of the first architectural students to master the use of the large-format camera, with glass negatives. Pope attended the
Ecole des Beaux-Arts in
Paris in 1896, honing his
Beaux-Arts style, returning to New York in 1900, to spend a few practical years in the office of
Bruce Price before opening a practice.

The West Building of the National Gallery of Art
Throughout his career, Pope designed private houses (including for the
Vanderbilt family: see
Vanderbilt houses), and other public buildings besides the Jefferson Memorial and the National Gallery, such as the massive
Masonic ''
Temple of the Scottish Rite'' (1911 - 1915), also in Washington, and the triumphal-arch Theodore Roosevelt Memorial at the
American Museum of Natural History in
New York City. In 1919 he provided a master plan for the future growth of
Yale University, one that was significantly revised by James Gamble Rogers in 1921 with more sympathy for the requirements of the city of
New Haven, Connecticut, but which kept the Collegiate Gothic unifying theme offered by Pope. Pope's original plan is a prime document in the
City Beautiful movement in
city planning.
Pope's designs alternated between revivals of
Gothic,
Georgian, eighteenth-century French, and
classical styles. Pope designed the Henry E. Huntington mausoleum on the grounds of the Huntington Library and later used the design as a prototype for the Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C.
The Jefferson Memorial and the National Gallery of Art were both
neoclassical, modelled by Pope on the Roman
Pantheon.
Less known projects by Pope include
Union Station,
Richmond, Virginia (1919), with a central rotunda capped with a low saucer dome, now housing the
Science Museum of Virginia;
Branch House (1917-1919), a Tudor-style mansion also in Richmond that now houses the
Virginia Center for Architecture ;
Baltimore Museum of Art; and in Washington the Masonic Temple of the Scottish Rite (1911-1915),
Constitution Hall, Pharmaceutical Building, and the National Archives Building (''illustration, left''). In
Milwaukee, Wisconsin he provided a severe
neo-Georgian clubhouse for the University Club (1926). He designed additions to the
Tate Gallery and
British Museum in London, an unusual honor for an American architect, and the War Memorial at Montfaucon, France. Pope was also responsible for extensive alterations to
Belcourt, the
Newport residence of
Oliver and
Alva Belmont.

Union Station (a.k.a. Broad Street Station) , Richmond, VA, opened 1919
In 1991 an exhibition at the National Gallery of Art, "John Russell Pope and the Building of the National Gallery of Art" spurred the reappraisal of his work, which had been scorned and derided by many critics influenced by
International Modernism.
See also
Eggers & Higgins
External links
★
University Club, Milwaukee
★
Yale University plan, 1919
★
Alpha Delta Phi at Cornell, 1931, John Russell Pope, architect
★
John Russell Pope's Master Plan for Dartmouth, 1919