Gavin Stamp | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1948-03-15)15 March 1948 |
| Died | 30 December 2017(2017-12-30) (aged 69) |
| Pen name | Piloti |
| Occupation |
|
| Nationality | British |
| Education | Dulwich College |
| Alma mater | Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge |
Gavin Mark Stamp (15 March 1948 – 30 December 2017) was a British writer, television presenter andarchitectural historian.
Stamp was educated atDulwich College in South London from 1959 to 1967 as part of the "Dulwich Experiment",[1] then atGonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he obtained aPhD in 1978 with a thesis entitledGeorge Gilbert Scott, junior, architect, 1839–1897.[2]
Stamp's career was one of largely independentjournalism, writing, lecturing and polemic on architectural topics. Under thepseudonym "Piloti", he wrote the "Nooks & Corners" architecture criticism column inPrivate Eye from 1978 until his death,[3] including giving theHugh Casson Award for worst new building of the year.[4] He regularly contributed essays on architecture to the fine arts and collector's magazineApollo. From 1990 he taught architectural history, latterly as Professor, at theMackintosh School of Architecture at theGlasgow School of Art. He bought and restored a terrace house thatAlexander "Greek" Thomson designed for a local builder in Moray Place,Glasgow. In 2003, he resigned from the school and reverted to being an independent scholar and was widely invited as a guest lecturer.
He was a long-standing trustee and for a time chairman of theTwentieth Century Society, a registered charity which promotes the appreciation of modern architecture and the conservation of Britain's architectural heritage.[5] He was also active in theVictorian Society in various capacities over five decades. He lent his support as lecturer, journalist and lobbyist to a wide range of architectural conservation causes on behalf of buildings in many styles, especially those he felt were "worthy but unpopular causes". As such, he was prominent in campaigns to save buildings such asBattersea Power Station andBankside Power Station (nowTate Modern) which were threatened with destruction.[6]
Stamp presented a number of programmes about architecture forChannel 5. In 2005 he presentedPevsner's Cities: Liverpool andPevsner's Cities: Newcastle, and in 2006Pevsner's Cities: Oxford;[7] each programme profiled the cities with reference to the writings of architectural historianNikolaus Pevsner. In 2007 he presented a five-part architectural travel seriesGavin Stamp's Orient Express,[8] in which he travelled by train along the originalOrient Express route, stopping off to look at architecture and to see how the history of Eastern Europe is told in its buildings.
Stamp regularly made television appearances as an expert interviewee: in 1986 he appeared inA Sense of the Past, a 6-part series for schools produced byYorkshire Television about the relationship between buildings and local history; in 1990 he was interviewed forDesign Classics: The Telephone Box, a favourite subject of Stamp's and one he wrote about (he inspired thelisting of manytelephone kiosks[9]); in 1995 he appeared as guest expert in an episode ofOne Foot in the Past aboutIsambard Kingdom Brunel; and in 2003 he was interviewed byPaul Binski for an episode of Channel 5'sDivine Designs which profiledAlexander "Greek" Thomson'sSt. Vincent Street Free Church in Glasgow.
National Life Stories conducted an oral history interview (C467/48) with Stamp in 2000 for its Architects Lives' collection, now held by theBritish Library.[10]
Stamp's archive is held at thePaul Mellon Centre in London,[11] and includes correspondence, images, research notes, newspaper and journal cuttings, draft publications, etc, from throughout his life.[12] It was donated to the Centre in 2018.[11][12]
Stamp was the son of Norah and Barry Stamp (the last Chairman ofCave Austin and Company). He was married to Alexandra Artley from 1982 until 2007. Their daughter Cecilia is a jewellery designer,[13][14] and their other daughter, Agnes, works forCountry Life.[15][16][17]
He married his second wife,biographer and cultural historianRosemary Hill, on 10 April 2014.
Stamp was a life-long member of theChurch of England and loved its traditional forms of liturgy and architecture. In his last years he worshipped at St Hilda's church,Crofton Park in South London.[18]
Stamp was diagnosed withprostate cancer and underwent a course ofchemotherapy in 2017.[19] He died on 30 December 2017.[9]