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Michael Stapleton

 

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Michael Stapleton



 
 
Michael Stapleton (born Dublin
Dublin

Dublin is both the largest city and capital of Republic of Ireland. It is located near the midpoint of Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey and at the centre of the Dublin Region....
, Ireland, in 1747, died 8 August 1801, in Dublin) is regarded as having been the most skilled stuccodore working in the neoclassical or "Adam"
Robert Adam

Robert Adam was a Scotland neoclassicism architect, interior designer and furniture designer. He was the son of William Adam , Scotland's foremost architect of the time, and trained under him....
 style that dominated Dublin interior decoration in the final decades of the 18th century.
leton was born in Dublin, the son of George Stapleton, who may have been a plasterer
Plasterer

A Plasterer is a tradesman who works with plaster, such as forming a layer of plaster on an interior wall or plaster Molding on ceilings or walls....
 by trade. He married Frances Todderick, the daughter of a Dublin timber merchant, in 1774.






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Michael Stapleton (born Dublin
Dublin

Dublin is both the largest city and capital of Republic of Ireland. It is located near the midpoint of Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey and at the centre of the Dublin Region....
, Ireland, in 1747, died 8 August 1801, in Dublin) is regarded as having been the most skilled stuccodore working in the neoclassical or "Adam"
Robert Adam

Robert Adam was a Scotland neoclassicism architect, interior designer and furniture designer. He was the son of William Adam , Scotland's foremost architect of the time, and trained under him....
 style that dominated Dublin interior decoration in the final decades of the 18th century.

Life

Stapleton was born in Dublin, the son of George Stapleton, who may have been a plasterer
Plasterer

A Plasterer is a tradesman who works with plaster, such as forming a layer of plaster on an interior wall or plaster Molding on ceilings or walls....
 by trade. He married Frances Todderick, the daughter of a Dublin timber merchant, in 1774. They lived for a few years in No. 59 Camden Street, until about 1781. Being a Catholic, he was not allowed become a member of a Guild
Guild

File:Windsorguildhall.jpgA guild is an association of artisan in a particular trade. The earliest guilds were formed as confraternities of workers....
 (this law was relaxed in 1793). In 1784 he was working in Trinity College
Trinity College, Dublin

Trinity College, Dublin , corporately designated as the Provost, Fellows and Scholars of the College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, was founded in 1592 by Queen Elizabeth I of England as the "mother of a university", and is the only constituent residential college of the University of Dublin....
 where some of the exceptional contributions he has made to stucco
Stucco

Stucco or render is a material made of an Construction aggregate, a binder , and water. Stucco is applied wet and hardens to a very dense solid....
 work are to be seen. The Stapletons had four children: Robert who died young; George
George Stapleton

George Stapleton was a prominent Irish stuccodore, son of Michael Stapleton....
 took over the family business when his father died; Margaret married a stone-cutter called John Taylor; and Mary married into a family of paper-stainers and house painters.

The family moved to Mecklenburg Street, then associated with those in the building trade. Stapleton associated with the master-builder, Robert West, the progenitor of the Dublin School of plasterwork of the 1760s. When West died Stapleton was his executor. He inherited his pattern books and both modelled himself on, and refined the style of, this central figure in the shaping of architecture and design in Dublin and in the country.

He died in 1801 and is buried at Malahide Abbey, just outside Dublin City. After his death his son George continued his work, a famous example being the Chapel Royal
Chapel Royal (Dublin Castle)

The Chapel Royal in Dublin Castle was the official Church of Ireland chapel of the Household of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland from 1814 until the creation of the Irish Free State in 1922....
 in Dublin Castle
Dublin Castle

Dublin Castle off Dame Street, Dublin, Republic of Ireland, is a major Republic of Ireland governmental complex, formerly the fortified seat of United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland rule in Ireland until 1922....
. Two of his grand-children married members of the Conlan brewing family of Dublin.

Plaster work

Stapleton's name has become synonymous with the elegant ornamental plasterwork of the late 18th-century townhouse. His collection of decorative designs was presented to the National Library of Ireland
National Library of Ireland

The National Library of Ireland is a national library located in Dublin, Republic of Ireland, in a building designed by Thomas Newenham Deane. The Minister for Arts, Sport and Tourism is the member of the Irish Government responsible for the library....
 in 1940 by the Friends of the National Collections of Ireland, which enabled previously unknown works by him to be identified. In connection with prominent Dublin buildings he was recorded by the Georgian Society Records (Dublin 1909-1913), and was credited with "much of the fine work in Dublin at this period". Sacheverell Sitwell
Sacheverell Sitwell

Sir Sacheverell Sitwell, 6th Baronet Companion of Honour was an England writer, best known as an art critic and writer on architecture, particularly the baroque....
 commented that: "...the Dublin artisans (of the period) were second to none in Europe, and the reader need only glance through the volumes of the Georgian Society to feel certain of this." The first studies specifically devoted to Stapleton were published in articles by C. P. Curran in 1939-40, who added significantly to the canon of Stapleton's executed works.

The most publicly available example of Stapleton's work is in Powerscourt House, South William Street, Dublin, and can be seen by every shopper who visits there. Countless generations of schoolboys at Belvedere College
Belvedere College

Belvedere College SJ is a private secondary school for boys located on Great Denmark Street, Dublin, Ireland. It is also known as St. Francis Xavier's College...
 in Dublin have also gazed upon his work. Among other buildings that he decorated are:
  • Marlay House
    Marlay Park

    Marlay Park is a 121 hectares suburban public park located in Rathfarnham in the administrative area of Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown, in County Dublin, Ireland....
    , Co. Dublin
  • Lucan House, built around 1770 by Agmondisham Vesey, who had married into family of Patrick Sarsfield
  • Nos. 16 and 17 St. Stephen's Green
    St. Stephen's Green

    St Stephen's Green }} is an inner-city public park in Dublin, Ireland. The park is within the city centre, adjoining the nearby shopping area of the same name, which is located on Grafton Street, Dublin....
    , Dublin
  • Nos. 5 and 6 Ely Place
    Ely Place, Dublin

    Ely PlaceFile:Ely-place-january.jpgEly Place is a street in central Dublin with Georgian Dublin. It is a continuation of Upper Merrion Street and the place where Baggot Street, Dublin and Merrion Row meet....
    , Dublin
  • Mount Kennedy, Co. Wicklow
  • Ardress House
    Annaghmore

    Annaghmore is a small village in County Armagh, Northern Ireland, near Loughgall. In the United Kingdom Census 2001 it had a population of 255 people....
    , Co. Armagh
  • Nos. 19, 20, 35 and 43 North Great George's St., Dublin
  • Trinity College, Dublin
    Trinity College, Dublin

    Trinity College, Dublin , corporately designated as the Provost, Fellows and Scholars of the College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity of Queen Elizabeth near Dublin, was founded in 1592 by Queen Elizabeth I of England as the "mother of a university", and is the only constituent residential college of the University of Dublin....
     - notably the Examination Hall and Chapel.
And there are many others.

House-building

Stapleton built a number of houses in Dublin. The only house to have survived the "vicissitudes of time and site redevelopment" (Lucey) is the present No. 9 Harcourt Street, built around 1785. He built two further houses on Harcourt Street, corresponding to Nos. 3 and 4 (the latter the birthplace of Edward Carson
Edward Carson, Baron Carson

Edward Henry Carson, Baron Carson, Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, Knight Bachelor, Queen's Counsel was a leader of the Ulster Unionist Party....
). He was among the first leaseholders in Luke Gardiner's
Luke Gardiner

The Right Honourable Luke Gardiner was an Irish property developer and politician.In the Irish House of Commons he represented Tralee from 1725 until 1727 and Thomastown from 1727 until his death....
 development on Mountjoy Square. The houses he built and decorated to the hightest standard corresponded to Nos. 43, 44 and 45 Mountjoy Square.These houses became part of the struggle in the 1970s between the Georgian Society, who wanted the houses restored, but had not the resources to do so, and developers led by Matt Gallagher, of the Gallagher Group, who wanted to demolish the houses to build offices. Without security or mainenance the houses fell into a state of decay and for safety reasons Dublin Corporation had to demolish them.

He spent the last years of his life in a house he had built at No. 1 Mountjoy Place. This house was illegally demolished by the Jesuit owners of Belvedere College
Belvedere College

Belvedere College SJ is a private secondary school for boys located on Great Denmark Street, Dublin, Ireland. It is also known as St. Francis Xavier's College...
, although it was under a preservation order, on 26 April 1968. The carved ceilings and other works of Stapleton were destroyed. After protests by the Dublin Civic Group and others, Dublin Corporation immediately called a halt to the demolition work, but by then it was too late.

Stapleton's will (proved in 1801) listed his profession as "builder", suggesting that house-building had become an important part of his career. He would have co-operated with his brother-in-law, Thomas Todderick, with whom he had qualified, and the plasterer Andrew Callnan in various developments.

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