User:LemonArc/sandbox

Francis Terry (born 21 May 1969 in Dedham near Colchester, England) is a British architect. He was educated at Stowe School and Cambridge University, qualifying as an architect in 1994. He was a pupil of his father Quinlan Terry.

Work
Like his father, Francis Terry is a well-known representative of New Classical Architecture. Together, they formed the Quinlan and Francis Terry partnership and designed numerous country houses including Ferne Park, Dorest and Kilboy, Co Tipperary, Ireland, of which Professor David Watkin said "...is surely the greatest work so far of Quinlan and Francis Terry... [and] one of the finest classical houses of any period." .

“The interior is fabulously rich in plasterwork ornament designed by Francis Terry, whose drawings for it introduce a vibrancy and sensitivity to plant form and associated classical ornament on a scale unparalleled in modern British architecture” description by Professor David Watkin about Hanover Lodge, Regent’s Park, London in City Journal, Summer 2010.

In 2016, Francis Terry left his father’s practice in order to form Francis Terry and Associates. The work of Francis Terry and Associates has been focused around large country houses, housing developments for Halsbury Homes and community driven counter proposal for sites in London, including Mount Pleasant, West Hampsted and Empress Place.

Terry is also an artist and uses his talent to draw schemes and paint watercolours of his proposals. He regularly exhibits drawings in the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition.

Royal Institute of British Architects
In June 2017, Terry was elected chairman of RIBA’s Traditional Architecture Group (TAG).

Awards

 * Winsor and Newton Young Artist Award from the Royal Institute of Oil Painters, 1997
 * Silver Medal from the Royal Society of Portrait Painters, 1997
 * Worshipful Company of Architects Prize for Architectural Drawing, 2002

Quotes
"The way I approach beauty is through the rules and motifs of the classical style. For me, there is a magic to these architectural forms and shapes"

"It’s funny what most architects respond to. They tend to think if it’s popular, there’s something wrong with it. I prefer the Andy Warhol approach. If it’s popular, it’s good."