Emanuel Vincent HarrisOBERA (26 June 1876 – 1 August 1971), often known as E. Vincent Harris, was an English architect who designed several important public buildings in traditional styles.
He was primarily a classicist; A. Stuart Gray wrote: "Some of his buildings suggest the influence of Sir Edwin Lutyens, but are bolder, balder, and less subtle or more frank depending on one's point of view."[1] His work was often criticised by modernist architects. In his acceptance speech when he was awarded the RIBARoyal Gold Medal in 1951[2] Harris is reported to have said: "Look, a lot of you here tonight don't like what I do and I don't like what a lot of you do ...".[1]
10 Fitzroy Park, Highgate, completed in 1934, the house Harris designed for himself.
References
^ abcdJulian Holder (2007), Emanuel Vincent Harris and the survival of classicism in inter-war Manchester, in: Clare Hartwell & Terry Wyke (editors), Making Manchester, Lancashire & Cheshire Antiquarian Society, ISBN978-0-900942-01-3