Showing posts with label The Menagerie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Menagerie. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Temple House at Horton

A garden front view of The Temple House, Horton.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
Devoted Readers will recall the posts about the once-derelict folly known as The Menagerie that was expanded to become a house and presented by The Devoted Classicist in three parts here, here, and here.  Thanks to a notice sent by Andrew Triggs, author of the highly-recommended blog British and Irish Stately Homes, it was learned that another surviving outbuilding at Horton, The Temple House, was for sale.  Well, the majority of the parkland folly, a Listed Grade II house, is available for a price of GBP 875,000.  (See update at end of this essay).

Floor plans of The Temple House, Horton.
(The portico is not indicated)
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
Thought to date from the 1750s as a stone folly, The Temple was renovated and extended with a brick addition in the latter part of the 19th century.  The property was divided into two dwellings in 1990, according to the real estate agents, Jackson-Stops & Staff, Northampton, with The Temple House being to the south and Temple Court (also known as Temple Cottage) to the north.

A map of The Temple House, Horton, property.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
With a garden of about 1.4 acres, the entrance faces the road while the principal front with the portico faces the park.  Entering a vestibule, there is a Powder Room as we would describe it in the U.S.

The Dining Hall at The Temple House, Horton.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
The heated limestone floor continues into the Stair Hall and the Dining Hall with French doors opening to the portico, terrace, and gardens.

The Drawing Room at The Temple House, Horton.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
Beyond, the Drawing Room has walls with applied mouldings to simulate panelling.

The Kitchen at The Temple House, Horton.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
The Kitchen, which also serves as a Breakfast Room, has handmade cabinets with hardwood countertops and a fireplace.  Across the lobby with door to the garden is a Pantry/Utility Room with Carrara marble countertops.  In addtion, there is a small sitting room (not pictured) with hand-blocked Print Room style wallpaper, according to the sales data, this is used as a cinema room.

Upper Stair at The Temple House, Horton.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.


Bedroom One at The Temple House, Horton.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.


Bedroom Two at The Temple House, Horton.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
A Bathroom at The Temple House, Horton.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
Another garden front view of The Temple House.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.
Like The Menagerie, the design of The Temple House is attributed to the architect-astronomer, Thomas Wright of Durham.  (Note:  at time of publication of this posting of The Devoted Classicist, this property with ID = 50080 is not available).

A view of Temple Court in the distance.
Image:  Jackson-Stops & Staff.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

More of the Artistry of Rex Whistler

Rex Whistler's limewood urn at the end of the Gallery
of 12 North Audley Street, London.
Photo published in Country Life 1962.
Devoted Readers will recall a previous series of posts on The Menagerie, a remarkable folly whose Saloon featured four urns copied from a limewood model Rex Whistler created for the London home of Samuel Cortauld at 12 North Audley Street.  A exceptional rear Gallery, possibly based on designs by Edward Lovett Pearce, featured an end niche for which Whistler designed an urn that was carved from limewood, as seen in the first photo, when the house was occupied by Chistabel, Lady Aberconway.

A building section of 12 North Audley Street, London.
Image from British History archives.
White Allom decorated a bedroom on an upper floor (the next-to-top level) in the "Chinese" style around 1932 with Whistler painting a panel over the fireplace to blend with the wallpaper, but highlighting Picasso's "L'Enfant Au Pideon" dating from about 1901.  Considering it was a secondary room, it must have been a truly remarkable space.

The fireplace in the Chinese Bedroom
12 North Audley Street
with the panel over the mantle painted by Rex Whistler.
Photo from London Metro Archives.
The panel over the mantle painted by Rex Whistler c 1932
in the Chinese Bedroom, 12 N Audley Street, London.
Photo from Victoria & Albert Museum.
Picasso's painting "L'Enfant Au Pigeon".
The talent of Rex Whistler extended into a number of areas.  Whistler's sketch for a bookplate for Duff Cooper was printed from an engraving by Robert Osmond in 1931.

The bookplate for Duff Cooper
designed by Rex Whistler.
Image from The Duff Cooper Prize.
The bookplate is now used as the logo for The Duff Cooper Prize, an annual award for the best in non-fiction writing given each year since 1956.

Rex Whistler's design for the set of the ballet
"The Rake's Progress" 1942
The stage set and costumes for the 1935 Royal Opera House production of the ballet "The Rake's Progress" were designed by Rex Whistler.  Inspired by a series of paintings by social satirist William Hogarth, the colors evoke murky 18th century London in presenting a young man's fall from grace after being corrupted by wealth;  the sets and costume designs are still used when the ballet is staged. Whistler also designed the sets for a 1942 production for Sadler's Wells ballet, as seen in the image above.

Rex Whistler's design for a Neptune carpet,
a circa 1935 oil sketch.
Image from the Edward James Foundation.
One of The Devoted Classicist's most memorable of many wonderful experiences as an Attingham student was spending a week living at West Dean, the Edwardian country estate of art patron Edward James.  After dinner in the modern David Mlinaric-decorated dining hall in the converted service court, a lecture followed in the original Dining Room of the house, now used as a conference room.  Although listening, my eyes often studied the fantastic rug woven to a design by Rex Whistler about 1935, pictured above.

A toile fabric printed in a design by Rex Whistler.
Image from Clovelly Silk Company.
Textile design was another field that benefitted from Rex Whistler's talent.  His design for a toile de jouy printed cotton is still produced by the Clovelly Silk Company.

Despite the great talent shown in Rex Whistler's murals and other artistic expressions more associated with architecture and  decorative arts, many know him from his pictures of two faces in a single image that are different when viewed inverted.

Reversible faces from OHO.
Rex's brother Laurence Whistler added witty comments and published the books OHO and AHA that can can be read from different directions in 1946.

Rex Whistler's "Tivoli From The Road" 1929.
Rex Whistler produced landscape paintings and portraits of high quality, it's just that his decorative work is of more interest to this writer.


A Sitting Room at 39 Preston Park, Brighton,
decorated by Rex Whistler.
At age 35, Rex Whistler was too old to join the army, but he persuaded the Welsh Guards to take him in.  This room in Brighton that served as an officer's Sitting Room was painted by Whistler to enliven the space while he waited to be shipped out.  The overmantle silhouette of King George IV painted on paper was preserved and is now in the collection of The Royal Pavillion in Brighton.

Rex Whistler self portrait, 1940.
On the balcony of 27 York Terrace, London.
Council of the National Army Museum.
This self portrait, on a balcony overlooking Regent's Park, London, was painted the day his uniform arrived.  Although Whistler could have served in an artistic function in England, he felt that men his age should fight.  Rex was a tank commander, part of the Guards Armoured Division that crossed to Normandy following the D-Day Invasions.  He was killed on his first day of action.

Rex Whistler in a photo by Howard Coster, 1936.
According to Jenny Spencer-Smith of the National Army Museum, 'The Times' received more letters about his death in action than any other person during World War II.
A Memorial Exhibition of Rex Whistler's works was held in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, from October 12 to December 18, 1960, and in Brighton, January 7 to 28, 1961.  A catalogue of 31 pages was authored by brother Laurence Whistler.

Laurence Whistler also wrote a book about his brother titled THE LAUGHTER AND THE URN, THE LIFE OF REX WHISTLER that was published in 1985.  The cover features a detail of his murals for Plas Newydd, with the artist holding a broom.

But the book soon to be published that Whistler fans are anticipating is IN SEARCH OF REX WHISTLER: HIS LIFE AND HIS WORK by Mirabel and Hugh Cecil.  The cover features a detail of the mural for Port Lympne, featured in the previous post.  A selection of books about Rex Whistler and his work may be ordered here.

A third post in this series will present people and objects associated with Rex Whistler.  If this is being read from the archives rather from a current post of The Devoted Classicist, be sure to read "Rex Whistler Murals" here.