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William Kent

 
Art Encyclopedia: William Kent

(b Bridlington, bapt 1 Jan 1685; d London, 12 April 1748). English architect, painter, landscape gardener and designer. He was the most exuberant and innovative architect and designer active in England in the first half of the 18th century. He was trained as a painter but was not particularly successful or remarkable in this work, showing greater skill as a draughtsman. As an architect he was highly versatile, practising in both the Palladian and Gothick styles, and this versatility extended to his work as a designer, which included interior decoration, furniture and silverware, book illustration, stage sets and gardens.

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British History: William Kent
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Kent, William (1685-1748). Architect, painter and landscape architect. In 1719 Kent was brought back from Rome by Lord Burlington, and together they became the leading proponents of Palladianism in England. In 1727 Kent published The Designs of Inigo Jones. Although Kent designed the Horse Guards, the Royal Mews, and the Treasury buildings, most of his architecture was for private clients. A notable instance of this was his collaboration with Burlington at Holkham Hall, Norfolk (1734), with its dramatic apsidal entrance hall with columns, coffered ceiling, and grand staircase. Significant too are Kent's garden buildings and landscaping at Chiswick, Rousham, Stowe, and Claremont.


(c.1685–1748)

English painter, designer, landscape-architect, and architect. He was taken up by the nobility early in his career, and travelled to Rome (from 1709), where he made the acquaintance of many English grandees, including Lord Burlington, whose protégé he became. Kent edited the Designs of Inigo Jones with some Additional Designs (1727), the ‘additions’ being by Burlington and himself, and drawn by Flitcroft. Kent did not practise as an architect until the 1730s, at a time when the second Palladian Revival was in full swing, but he was not stylistically restricted, for some of his schemes of interior decorations (and his furniture-designs) are sumptuous, looking back towards the Baroque he had admired in Italy: 22 Arlington Street (1741) and 44 Berkeley Square (1742–4—with a noble staircase), both in London, contained some of his most successful interiors. Burlington got his man into the Office of Works in 1726, and in 1735 Kent became Master-Mason and Deputy Surveyor. His best-known works are the Treasury Buildings (1733–7) and the Horse Guards Building (1748–59—completed by Vardy), both in Whitehall, London, but he also designed several fabriques at Stowe, Bucks. (including the Temple of Venus (before 1732), the Temple of Ancient Virtue (c.1734), the celebrated Temple of British Worthies (c.1735), Congreve's Monument (1736), and other buildings). Of considerable significance in the history of Palladianism was Holkham Hall, Norfolk (1734–65), for which M. Brettingham was the executive architect. Holkham is the most splendid Palladian house in England (Burlington had a hand in its design): its lavish marble apsidal entrance-hall (an amalgam of a Roman basilica and a Vitruvian Egyptian Hall), with a coffered ceiling and a magnificent stair leading to the piano-nobile level, is one of the grandest rooms of the period. The exterior of the house is an excellent example of concatenation, of which Kent was a master (e.g. Horse Guards Building, London).

Kent was an important figure in garden-history, for he was in the vanguard of the revolution against the formal gardens of the C17, and combined Palladian architecture with the contrived ‘naturalness’ of the park. He created landscapes that were comparable to the pictures of Claude or Poussin (as at Rousham, Oxon. (1738–41)), and so must be regarded as a pioneer of the Picturesque in English landscape-design, and indeed was in the vanguard of the movement in opposition to the formal garden of C17. He also designed in the Gothick style, notably the choir-screen, Gloucester Cathedral (1741—destroyed), and the pulpit at York Minster (1741—burned, 1829), published by John Vardy (1744), which may have been the source of some of the Gothick elements in St John's Church, Shobdon, Herefs. (1746–56).

Kent's mastery of the Baroque style may best be seen in his funerary monuments, e.g. the huge memorial to John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722), in Blenheim Palace Chapel, Oxon., carved by John Michael Rysbrack (1694–1770), of 1730–3.

Bibliography

  • Colvin (1995)
  • Cruickshank (ed.) (1985)
  • J. Curl (2002a)
  • Gunnis (1968)
  • Hunt (1987)
  • M. McCarthy (1987)
  • Placzek (ed.) (1982)
  • Hunt & Willis (eds.) (1989)
  • Jane Turner (1996)
  • M. Wilson (1984)

The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: William Kent
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Kent, William, 1685-1748, English landscape gardener, architect, and painter. A minor painter, Kent made ceiling decorations for Kensington Palace. He greatly influenced landscape gardening by changing the prevailing artificial style to one based more closely on nature, as in the gardens at Rousham. As an architect, he followed Neo-Palladian tenets and adhered to strictly symmetrical planning, especially in his masterpiece, Holkham Hall, Norfolk (begun 1734). In London he planned the treasury building (1734) and the Horse Guards building (erected after his death, 1750-58).

Bibliography

See study by M. Jourdain (1948).

Wikipedia: William Kent
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William Kent

William Kent (born in Bridlington, Yorkshire, c. 1685 – 12 April 1748) was an eminent English architect, landscape architect and furniture designer of the early 18th century.

Contents

Education

Kent's career began as a sign and coach painter who was encouraged to study art, design and architecture by his employer. A group of Yorkshire gentlemen sent Kent for a period of study in Rome. During his stay, he decorated the church of San Giuliano dei Fiamminghi (Church of St. Julian of the Flemings[1] ). He was awarded the second medal in the second class for painting in the annual competition run by the Accademia di San Luca.[2] He also met several important figures Thomas Coke, later 1st Earl of Leicester, with whom he toured Northern Italy in the summer of 1714 (a tour that led Kent to an appreciation of the architectural style of Andrea Palladio's palaces in Vicenza). Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni in Rome, for whom he apparently painted some pictures, though no records survive. The most significant meeting was between Kent and Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, who took him back to England in 1719. As a painter, he displaced Sir James Thornhill in decorating the new state rooms at Kensington Palace, London; for Burlington, he decorated Chiswick House and Burlington House.

Architectural works

He is better remembered as the central architect of the revived Palladian style in England.[3] Burlington gave him the task of editing The Designs of Inigo Jones... with some additional designs in the Palladian/Jonesian taste by Burlington and Kent, which appeared in 1727. As he rose through the royal architectural establishment, the Board of Works, Kent applied this style to several public buildings in London, for which Burlington's patronage secured him the commissions: the Royal Mews at Charing Cross (1731–33, demolished in 1830), the Treasury buildings in Whitehall (1733–37), the Horse Guards building in Whitehall, (designed shortly before his death and built 1750–1759). These neo-antique buildings were inspired as much by the architecture of Raphael and Giulio Romano as by Palladio.

In country house building, major commissions for Kent were designing the interiors of Houghton Hall (c.1725–35), recently built by Colen Campbell for Sir Robert Walpole, but at Holkham Hall the most complete embodiment of Palladian ideals is still to be found; there Kent collaborated with Thomas Coke, the other "architect earl", and had for an assistant Matthew Brettingham, whose own architecture would carry Palladian ideals into the next generation. A theatrically Baroque staircase and parade rooms in London, at 44 Berkeley Square, are also notable. Kent's domed pavilions were erected at Badminton House and at Euston Hall.

Kent could provide sympathetic Gothic designs, free of serious antiquarian tendencies, when the context called; he worked on the Gothic screens in Westminster Hall and Gloucester Cathedral.

Landscape architect

As a landscape designer, Kent was one of the originators of the English landscape garden, a style of 'natural' gardening that revolutionised the laying out of gardens and estates. His projects included Chiswick House, Stowe, Buckinghamshire, from about 1730 onwards, designs for Alexander Pope's villa garden at Twickenham, for Queen Caroline at Richmond and notably at Rousham House, Oxfordshire, where he created a sequence of Arcadian set-pieces punctuated with temples, cascades, grottoes, Palladian bridges and exedra, opening the field for the larger scale achievements of Capability Brown in the following generation. Smaller Kent works can be found at Shotover House, Oxfordshire, including a faux Gothic eyecatcher and a domed pavilion. His all-but-lost gardens at Claremont, Surrey, have recently been restored. It is often said that he was not above planting dead trees to create the mood he required.

Kent's only real downfall was said to be his lack of horticultural knowledge and technical skill (which people like Charles Bridgeman possessed - whose impact on Kent is often underestimated), but his naturalistic style of design was his major contribution to the history of landscape design. Claremont, Stowe, and Rousham are places where their joint efforts can be viewed. Stowe and Rousham are Kent's most famous works. At the latter, Kent elaborated on Bridgeman's 1720s design for the property, adding walls and arches to catch the viewer's eye. At Stowe, Kent used his Italian experience, particularly with the Palladian Bridge. At both sites Kent incorporated his naturalistic approach.

Furniture designer

His stately furniture designs complemented his interiors: he designed furnishings for Hampton Court Palace (1732), for Devonshire House in London, and at Rousham. The royal barge he designed for Frederick, Prince of Wales can still be seen at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.

In his own age, Kent's fame and popularity were so great that he was employed to give designs for all things, even for ladies' birthday dresses, of which he could know nothing and which he decorated with the five classical orders of architecture. These and other absurdities drew upon him the satire of William Hogarth who, in October 1725, produced a Burlesque on Kent's Altarpiece at St. Clement Danes.

Walpole tribute

According to Horace Walpole, Kent "was a painter, an architect, and the father of modern gardening. In the first character he was below mediocrity; in the second, he was a restorer of the science; in the last, an original, and the inventor of an art that realizes painting and improves nature. Mahomet imagined an elysium, Kent created many."

References

External links

Court offices
Preceded by
Sir Godfrey Kneller
Principal Painter in Ordinary to the King
1723–1748
Succeeded by
John Shackleton

Bibliography

  • Colvin, Howard, (1995) A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600-1840. 3rd ed., 1995, s.v. "Kent, William"
  • Hunt, John Dixon, (1986; 1996) Garden and Grove: The Italian Renaissance Garden in the English Imagination, 1600-1750, London, Dent; London and Philadelphia. ISBN 0460046810
  • Hunt, John Dixon, (1987) William Kent, Landscape garden designer: An Assessment and Catalogue of his designs. London, Zwemmer.
  • Jourdain, M., (1948) The Work of William Kent: Artist, Painter, Designer and Landscape Gardener. London, Country Life.
  • Mowl, Timothy, (2006) William Kent: Architect, Designer, Opportunist. London, Jonathan Cape.
  • Newton, N., (1971) Design of the land. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
  • Ross, David, (2000) William Kent. Britain Express, 1-2. Retrieved September 26, 2004, from http://www.britainexpress.com/History/bio/kent.htm
  • Rogers, E., (2001) Landscape design a cultural and architectural history. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
  • Sicca, Cinzia Maria, (1986) "On William Kent's Roman sources", Architectural History, vol. 29, 1986, pp. 134-147.
  • Wilson, Michael I., (1984) William Kent: Architect, Designer, Painter, Gardener, 1685-1748. London, Boston, Melbourne and Henley, Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 0710099835

 
 
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Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Architecture and Landscaping. A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. Copyright © 1999, 2006 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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