Showing posts with label Prince Charles and Camilla. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prince Charles and Camilla. Show all posts

Friday, August 15, 2014

Jonathan Myles-Lea Residential Portraits

A bird's eye view of Dream Acres
painted by Jonathan Myles-Lea
for Country Life magazine.
Image via Arabella Lennox-Boyd
The Devoted Classicist first learned of the exceptional talents of contemporary artist Jonathan Myles-Lea when his remarkable composite views of Daylesford came to light during the research for the blog essay that was the Carole and Anthony Bamford part of the series about that quintessential country house. 

A detail of the painting of Daylesford,
the Bamford estate, showing the main house
by S.P. Cockerell, the Orangery by Sanderson Miller,
the Gardener's Cottage and the large Kitchen Garden.
Image rights are the property of Jonathan Myles-Lea

Myles-Lea has been described as the successor to painter John Constable and the extraordinary muralist Rex Whistler.  While this is certainly understandable, Jonathan Myles-Lea's delightful paintings remind me of my favorite house portraits by the seventeenth-century master Johannes Kip and the twentieth-century genius Felix Kelly.

Jonathan Myles-Lea.
Photo by Juan F. Bastos.

Jonathan has a Bachelors Degree in The History of Art & Architecture from the University of London, which was undoubtedly a factor in his portraits of historic homes and gardens.  Friendships with artist Francis Bacon, art expert (and jazz singer) George Melly, and portraitist Lucien Freud led to advice that influenced his work as well.

Pen and Ink.
The Rectory at Litton Cheney: in-progress.
Image rights are the property of Jonathan Myles-Lea
This series of images for The Rectory at Litton Cheney is a 'straight-on' rather than aerial view, but shows the steps Myles-Lea goes through to produce the layers that give the finished results.

Sepia.
The Rectory at Litton Cheney: in-progress.
Image rights are the property of Jonathan Myles-Lea.
The Rectory in Dorset was the home of noted English engraver Reynolds Stone from 1953 until 1979.

The completed oil paintng, 30" x 60".
The Rectory at Litton Cheney.
Image rights are the property of Jonathan Myles-Lea.
In 1991, he painted a friend's house in North Wales, Plas Teg, that has led to over 60 commissions in ten countries.  In the United States, paintings have been commissioned by Evelyn Lauder, Norman Lear, and Oprah Winfrey.  In Great Britain, clients in addition to Lord and Lady Bamford include David Armstrong-Jones, Lord Linley; The Cliveden Estate, and Lady Victoria Leatham at Burghley House.  A friendship with one of Britain's greatest garden designers, Sir Roy Strong, led to a 1994 commission of his garden, The Laskett; Strong was credited with introductions to potential clients that led to more commissions.

The Laskett.
The garden of Sir Roy Strong and his late wife
Julia Trevelyn Oman in Herefordshire is the largest
formal garden in England planted after 1945.
Image rights are the property of Jonathan Myles-Lea.
In 2007, Prince Charles commissioned the pen and ink drawing of his country house, Highgrove, that appears on the cover of a limited-edition, leather-bound book written by the Prince of Wales and Bunny Guiness.  In addition to the aerial view, there are various garden features forming a border.  Myles-Lea also designed a crest for this map that included items to represent the Prince's hobbies: polo-sticks, apples, an artist's palette, gardening tools, and a basket of eggs.  Jonathan Myles-Lea's map also appears on other merchandise available in the Highgrove shop in addition to the book HIGHGROVE: A GARDEN CELEBRATED.

Highgrove.
Image rights are the property of Jonathan Myles-Lea
Country Life magazine commissioned an aerial view in 2009 of the fantasy 10 acre country estate, Dream Acres, that was designed by Arabella Lennox-Boyd and Jonathan Self for a series of articles for the weekly publication.  "For the painting of Dream Acres, I used the sweep of the main drive to lead the eye to the house, and then on to the stream at the end of the lawn.  I wanted to make the composition as dynamic as possible so that the viewer's eye travels through the picture -- as if they were taking a stroll through the garden."  It was the first time in the long history of the magazine that an illustration had been used for a cover.

The April 29, 2009, cover of Country Life
featuring Jonathan Myles-Lea's view of
the fantasy country estate, Dream Acres.
The artist's personal archives, consisting of several thousand compositional drawings, sketches, letters, and photos are in the process of being acquired by The Bodleian Library at The University of Oxford.  A book is in the works, expected to be published in January, 2015.

The back and front cover of the new book on
Jonathan Myles-Lea.
Jonathan Myles-Lea, with studios both in England and in the United States, may be commissioned to paint a portrait of your own beloved home and garden.  For details and particulars, contact the artist directly through his website.


Friday, June 1, 2012

Llwynywermod, Prince Charles' Home in Wales

For those who might think the Royal Family is not conscious of spending, here is the relatively modest retreat in Wales of Prince Charles and Camilla, Llwynywermod.  It is the first royal home in Wales since the English Civil War.
Rendering by Craig Hamilton Architects.
Owned by the Duchy of Cornwall, the 192 acre estate near the village of Myddfai, Llandovery, Carmarthenshire, was bought in 2006-2007.  The residence was once the coach house of the larger manor house now in ruins.  It was the home of the Griffies-Williams family.
Photo by Paul Highnam, Craig Hamilton Architects.
Renovation was completed in 2008 using traditonal building methods by John Weaver Construction to plans by Craig Hamilton Architects.
Photo by Paul Highnam, Craig Hamilton Architects.
With the exception of the Hall pictured above, the interior photos associated with the property seem to be the two bedroom apartment in the attached wing that can be rented when Charles and Camilla are not in residence.  (The Prince's exclusion of a television was relaxed for the rental quarters which has all the conveniences including a dishwasher, clothes washer/dryer, and high-speed internet service.  Guests are given a complimentary basket of Duchy of Cornwall products such as organic preserves, marmalades, and biscuits [cookies]).
Photo by Paul Highnam, Craig Hamilton Architects.
In keeping with Prince Charles' ideals, no pesticides or artificial fertilizers are used.  Cleaning products are environmentally friendly.  And sewage is treated through a reed-bed system for filtering before released into the ground.  Insulation is achieved through corn cob filling and sheeps wool;  the sheep also control the meadows while depositing natural fertilizer to promote the growth of wildflowers and orchids.  Natural paint was used on hemp plaster walls.  A wood chip boiler (using scrap wood from a nearby site) supplies hot water and heat;  the electricity is 100% from renewable sources. 
Photo by Paul Highnam, Craig Hamilton Architects.
The furnishings are a mixture of Welsh furnishings, old and new, using local fabrics with quilts and rugs from local sources as well.  The Welsh dresser in the Hall was given to The Queen on Her Majesty's wedding day by the people of Meirionnydd according to the official website of The Prince of Wales, www.princeofwales.gov.uk.  The house is also used for functions by various charities.

More about the once grand estate and the changing fortunes of the Griffies-Williams family can be found in the book written by Welsh architecture expert Mark Baker, A ROYAL HOME IN WALES: LLWYNYWERMOD.  The first photo in this essay showing Charles and Camilla at Llwynywermod is from www.photobucket.com.