Georgian Gardens

 

French formal Gardens

When George the First came to the throne in 1714 the formal symmetrical French style of gardening as improved by Le Nôtre was the dominant style in England. Andre Le Nôtre relieved the monotony of the earlier French Formal style with dramatic illusions and the technical control of water. The dramatic illusions which Le Nôtre introduced into his vast works at Vaux, Versailles and Chantilly through manipulation of perspective simply overwhelmed any horticultural decoration. He used allées and canals to draw the eye into the distance Longleat in1757 with French formal style landscapingand marvelous fountains to add a sense of awe and splendor. Charles II had Hampton Court landscaped in the French Grand Style. These gardens were conceived to control and dominate nature. This made horticulture quite secondary.

John James translated "The Nôtre. Le Blond laid out the gardens at Peterhof the summer palace on the Bay of Finland for Peter the Great of Russia. This book became the standard international text on the French Grand Style. It ranks as one of the most influential garden books ever published. A small English garden in the French style with its, patte d'oie "goose's foot", star of allées walled with clipped hedges still exists at Inkpen in Berkshire. There is also a large garden in the French style at St.Paul's Waldenbury where the allée's of the patte d'oie have temples and statues at their end points to lead the eye into the distance and provide controlled views.

This style was also enlarged upon to create great star centered rides through woods on the great estates of the landed gentry like Dunham Massy in Cheshire. A five-mile ride between Lord Alan Bathurst's townhouse in Cirencester and his country house is still in existence. The 10,000 acre park at Cirencester is the best surviving example of Stephen Switzer's "Rural and Extensive Gardening." Switzer's theory that the whole estate should become part of the landscape design was an important step toward Walpole's "modern principles."

Sweeping Views

John Vanbrugh's (1664 -1726) innovation of a raised terraced walk from which to view the countryside moved the garden from small controlled views to sweeping vistas. He is most famous for his work for the 3rd Lord Carlisle (1670-1738) at Castle Howard where he began in 1699 to create a massively theatrical estate. "Nobody had told me," Horace Walpole wrote to a friend, Temple of the Four Winds at Castle Howard

"that I should at one view see a palace, a town, a fortified city, temples on high places, woods worthy of being each a metropolis of the Druids, the noblest lawn in the world fenced by half the horizon, and a mausoleum that would tempt one to be buried alive. In short I have seen gigantic places before, but never a sublime one."
Vanbrugh used a sunk fence, treated as a stone wall from the Park side and invisible from the house side due to the raised terrace, to open the grounds around the house to the views of the park while keeping the cattle off the house grounds. By both opening up the views with the use of the ha-ha and landscaping the park on a large scale to create better views, Vanbrugh created the world's first landscape garden. In the tradition of the good Whig landowner, virtually all Lord Carlisle's buildings were intended to serve some practical or symbolic function and not become mere landscape ornaments.


A Temple in the Grove or the Grand Tour Comes Home

In 1730 John Aislabie constructed the first wholly English garden Studley Royal near Ripon in Yorkshire. Through a considerable feat of engineering based on previous canal work a formal but simple pattern of water, moon ponds and temple at Studley Royalgrass, and trees accented by a white marble temple was created in a natural amphitheater in a valley. The moon pond water garden embodies the simple elegance that marks the neo classical style.

William Kent made his way to Rome where he met Lord Burlington (1695 - 1753) on his Grand Tour. They talked of doing for English landscaping what Claude had done for Italian landscape with his idealized paintings. Lord Burlington retained Kent to design the interiors of his villa Chiswick, to the west of London, and redesigned the French formal gardens into an idealized natural style. The gardens at Chiswick did an about face from the formal straight lines of the French style to the "Nature abhors a straight line" William Kent motto. A wag said of Chiswick house " House? Its too small to live in, but too large for a watch fob!" It was just right to host the 3rd Earl of Burlington's saloons where he showed his paintings and discussed classical beauty. Burlington was one of the most influential arbiters of taste in 18th century England, both as collector and architect.

Stowe Bridgeman  and Kent plans Stowe in Buckinghamshire was the most celebrated and visited eighteenth century garden. Its park became a changing display for the work of the most talented landscape designers of the time. This association with the avant-garde designers of the time kept Stowe high on the "must see" list of the guides to English gardens that began to be published in the early eighteenth century. At Stowe Sir William Temple (1634-1697) had the architect John Vanbrugh design a new house almost contemporary with Castle Howard. In 1715 the Whig Viscount Cobham commissioned Charles Bridgeman to create an appropriate landscape setting. Bridgeman's plan of long, radiating avenues, a monumental octagonal pool, classical temples, and lawns brilliantly separated from the working meadows by a ha-ha opened up the countryside in a dramatic and revolutionary way. The hidden barrier of a ha-ha fist used at Levens in about 1695 was derived from a French military bastion. The ha-ha made uninterrupted vistas possible.

The pictorial phase of Stowe landscape began in 1733 when William Kent laid out the little valley called Elysian Fields for Lord Cobham. The stiffness of Bridgeman's original plan was softened by cutting down the long straight avenue of trees, thinning of groves, and redesigning the lakes and pools along natural irregular lines. Garden buildings and temples were removed or relocated in order to harmonize with the new open compositions of the idealized settings of the over four hundred-acre garden.

Kent designed an idealized classical setting for a hillside at Chatsworth. A replica of the Sybil's temple at Tivoli at the top with cascades cascade at Chatsworthrecalling those at Villa Aldobrandini flanked by two classical pavilions reflects an inspired English translation of Italian gardens. Walpole's elegant and penetrating praise of Kent credited him with single handedly inventing the new garden style, but as we have seen it was a multi-staged progress carried forward by many designers all of whom had been captivated by an idealized classical past.

Kent was fully aware of all the exhilarating possibility of movement in the landscape offered by the revolutionary abandonment of "the line and level" when laying out a garden. At Rousham in 1738, he laid out a garden for General James Dormer that reminds one of a passage in Thomas Whately's "Observation on Modern Gardening" (1770)

"enchanted by the perpetual shifting scenes; the quick transitions; the total changes…The illuminated recesses, the fleeting shadows and the gleam of light glaring on the side, or trembling on the stream and the loneliness and stillness of the place all crowding together on the mind almost realize the ideas which naturally present themselves in the region of romance and fancy."

Mount Edgecombe the Cornwall home of the Edgecombe family was one of the most visited gardens in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. Richard Edgecombe laid out a walk by the sea with temples and romantic woods.

The Grotto meant to evoke a melancholy mood associated with creative talent became a common feature of gardens after Alexander Pope included a grotto in his garden at Twickenham in the 1720's. A grotto is one feature of the garden Henry Hoare II designed and built in collaboration with Henry Flitcroft from 1741 to 1765 on his Wiltshire estate. Hoare II, known in the family as 'the Magnificent', returned from Italy fresh from his Grand Tour in 1741 to take possession of the Stourhead estate. The Stourhead park was created in a luxuriantly planted valley, which Flitcroft made into a lake with a carefully planned walk around it that provided a sequence of Picturesque inward looking views and encounters with temples, statuary, springs and a grotto. The walk was conceived as an allegory of Aeneas' voyage after the fall of Troy. The grotto marks a stage in his journey, and the Temple of Flora is inscribed with the caution uttered by the Cumaean Sybil, in Virgil's Aeneid, before she led Aeneas into the underworld to hear the prophecy of Rome's founding: 'Begone! you who are uninitiated, begone!' One of the principal Picturesque views at Stourhead is known to reflect Claude Lorrain's Coast View of Delos with Aeneas and the passage from Vergil on which it was based, relating Aeneas's account of his experience in the Temple of Apollo at Delos...The architectural set-pieces each in a Picturesque location include a Temple of Apollo, a Temple of Flora, a Pantheon (from the Claude painting), and a Palladian bridge." Hoare based his design for the bridge on Palladio's five-arched bridge at Vicenza and expressed the hope that the whole composition would resemble a painting by Gaspar Poussin. The garden, meant to be like a painting, was itself painted by Nicholson in 1814 and by the famous painters Turner and Constable.

Lancelot 'Capability' Brown

Lancelot 'Capability' Brown (b1716 d1783) is the most famous English landscape designer. He was born in Northumberland and served an apprenticeship with Sir William Lorraine. Brown moved to Buckinghamshire in 1739 and was employed by Lord Cobham at Stowe in 1741. This gave him the opportunity of working with William Kent and John Vanbrugh. He later practiced as a landscape architect in his own right. On some occasions he designed both the house and its park. In 1764 Brown was appointed Master Gardener at Hampton Court. His practice expanded rapidly and he was often away on coach tours. Many examples of his work are open to the public. 700 acre Petworth Park in West Sussex is the greatest example of a landscape garden left in England. The park was one of Lancelot Brown's first projects as an independent designer. . In 1751 the Earl of Egremont employed 'Capability' Brown to landscape his deer park. When he arrived on the scene, there was a rectilinear garden, probably designed by George London (c1688), between the house and the lake. Brown swept this away, transported an estimated 64,000 tons of soil, dammed a stream and made a serpentine lake which became the park's centerpiece The view of the lake from Petworth House illustrates Petworth House and lakeBrown's typical work with lakes. The lawn runs right up to the lakeshores, which follow a serpentine pattern. The size of the lake is indiscernible, as Brown curved the far edges out of sight, and planted those shores with dense trees, thereby making the lake seem to stretch out into infinity, much as the rolling contours of his lawns mask the true size of the park. One can also see Brown's propensity for planting the tops of hills with clusters of trees, thereby accenting the movement of the land.

The cost of Brown's landscaping was enormous. He planted up to 100,000 trees on one estate alone, improved the soil, and dammed streams to create lakes. Using techniques developed by canal engineers 'Capability' Brown created lakes and turned the mechanical emptying of the lake into a thing of beauty like the delightful Rockwork Cascade in the glade below the lake at Bowood in Wiltshire. Maintaining his landscapes was actually profitable. One simply let the four-legged lawnmowers do the work. What better ornament for the park than, a money making, prize herd of cattle. Trees were an investment that could be judiciously harvested. The trees Brown thought fine enough for his work were the native English: elm, beech, chestnut, oak, lime, and Scotch pine. The imported trees he used were the cedar of Lebanon, the plain maple, and the evergreen oak. Lancelot Brown designed the grounds of over 140 estates, some of his best were Petworth, Blenheim Palace, Harewood House, Glamis Castle, and Bowood and Longleat in Wiltshire.

"I have a notion I shall begin here immediately so that the sooner you come the better," George Spencer, the 4th Duke of Marlborough, wrote imperiously to the leading landscape gardener of the day, Lancelot `Capability' Brown. At forty-seven, Brown's career was at its peak. 'Capability' Brown worked on the over 2000 acre Blenheim Palace Park near Woodstock in Oxfordshire from 1764 to 1768. A massive dam near Bladon was built to create the lake and two causeways were formed, allowing the river Glyme to flow out on either side of Vanbrugh's Grand Bridge. Large tracts of courtyard were grassed over and beech trees spread their mantle of shimmering leaves over the outskirts of the park.

Ornamental Gardening

Pagoda at Kew GardensSir William Chambers (1723-1796) was the chief critic of Brown's simple landscape garden. He developed what he called ornamental gardening. He was following the fad for chinoiserie as beautiful hand painted wallpapers and Chinese influenced furnishings became the rage. He designed the pagoda at Kew Gardens in 1770.


The Paradise Garden

Sir Humphry Repton, b. April 21, 1752 in Bury St. Edmunds, England, d. March 24, 1818 in London, was the undisputed successor to Lancelot "Capability" Brown as the premier landscaper in 18th century England. The prolific Repton took on more than four hundred commissions during his thirty-year career. Of a well-to-do family, he was intended for a mercantile career but, failing in that, retired to the country, where he learned something of the management of land and had an opportunity to develop his talent as an amateur painter of watercolour landscapes. In 1788 he set himself up as a landscape designer. Repton's first job as a landscaper came in 1788 after a family friend the Duke of Portland invited him to make some alterations to his garden. Sheringham HallRepton's work differed from Brown's in his signature casual transition between house and grounds by means of terraces planted with flowers, steps, and balustrades. Contributing largely to his success was his method of making watercolour drawings of the grounds upon which he was asked to advise, with his proposed alterations displayed on an overlay. His works include Barningham Hall in Norfolk, Glemham in Hereford, Harleston House and Park in Northampton, Holkoum, Langley Park, Sheringham Hall in Norfolk, and White Lodge in Richmond Park. In addition to several essays and a short play, Repton published three major books on landscape gardening: Sketches and Hints on Landscape Gardening (1795), Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening (1803), and Fragments on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening (1816). In 1811, in the process of escorting his daughters back from a ball, Repton's carriage tipped over leaving him with back injuries that would confine him to a wheelchair for the rest of his life. It also aggravated a preexisting heart condition that caused a further decline in Humphry's health. Repton's last book was prepared with the assistance of his son, John. The work deals at length with the concepts of "Grecian" and "Gothic" architecture.

The Picturesque Garden

Sheringham Hall above as Repton designed it and below as Knight imagined it in the picturesque styleIn the early 1800's Richard Payne Knight was the chief critic of Repton's work. He championed the dramatic scenery of the picturesque style of garden. These gardens were meant to move the emotions like the poetry of the Lakeland poets Coleridge and Wordsworth. Examples of this garden style are Belle Isle at Windamere, the quarry garden at Belsay Hall in Northumberland, and the dramatic and popular garden at Hawkston in Shropshire.



A Taste of India

SezincoteSezincote House in Gloucestershire is a hybrid style combining Palladian and Indian styles built for Sir Charles Cockeral who had made a fortune in the India trade. The gardens were design by Repton but the garden sculpture was by Thomas Daniell a painter who had traveled in India. Sezincote Indian accents include a statue of the goddess Souriya, a bronze serpent, Brahma bulls, and a mushroom-shaped fountain. The gracefully curved orangery at Sezincote catches as much sun as possible.

When the Prince Regent visited Sezincote he said, "I must have one of my own." Thus was born the Brighton Pavilion.

Roses

The Empress Josephine was very interested in the new plants being imported from all over the world. She had an important garden at her house near Paris, Malmaison. She began a rose collection in 1804 that popularized the new China roses as a garden plant. During the Napoleonic Wars China Roses were considered so important special safe conduct permits were issued to ships carrying them. The China Roses: Hume's Blush, Slater's Crimson, Parks' Yellow Scented, and Parson's Pink became the parents of modern roses. Pierre-Joseph Redoute, who commissioned by French Empress Josephine, painted over 170 of her roses.

Garden Magazines

John Claudius Loudon published the first magazine for the suburban upper middle class gardener. The magazine offered plans for suburban gardens that would enhance the picturesque differences of their villas. By 1820 there were quite a number of these magazines in publication.




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