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CAPABILITY BROWN

Capability Brown, by Nathaniel Dance, ca.1769 (National Portrait Gallery)

'Lancelot Brown' (1715/1716 — 6 February, 1783), more commonly known as 'Capability Brown', was an English landscape gardener. He is remembered as "the last of the great English eighteenth-century artists to be accorded his due", and "England's greatest gardener". He designed over 170 parks, many of which still endure. His influence was so great that the contributions to the English landscape garden made by Charles Bridgeman and William Kent are often overlooked; even Kent's apologist Horace Walpole allowed that Kent had been followed by "a very able master".[1]

Contents
Biography
Gardens and parks
See also
Notes
References
External links

Biography


Born in Kirkharle, Northumberland, and educated at Cambo School, he began work by serving as a gardener's boy at Sir William Loraine's seat at Kirkharle. From there he moved on to Wotton, a minor seat of Lord Cobham. He then joined Lord Cobham's gardening staff at Stowe, Buckinghamshire. There he served under William Kent, one of the founders of the new English style of landscape gardening. Whilst at Stowe, Brown married a local girl named Bridget Wayet and had the first four of his children.
As a proponent of the new English style, Brown became immensely sought after by the landed families. By 1751, Horace Walpole wrote of Brown's work at Warwick Castle:
:''The castle is enchanting; the view pleased me more than I can express, the river Avon tumbles down a cascade at the foot of it. It is well laid out by one Brown who has set up on a few ideas of Kent and Mr. Southcote.''
It is estimated that Brown was responsible for over 170 gardens surrounding the finest country houses and estates in Britain. His work still endures at Croome Court (where he also designed the house), Blenheim Palace, Warwick Castle, Harewood House, Bowood House, Milton Abbey (and nearby Milton Abbas village), in traces at Kew Gardens, and many other locations. This man who refused work in Ireland because he had not finished England was called "Capability" Brown because he would characteristically tell his landed clients their estates had great "capability" for landscape improvement.
Badminton House: features of the Brownian landscape at full maturity in the 19th century

His style of smooth undulating grass, which would run straight to the house, clumps, belts and scattering of trees and his serpentine lakes formed by invisibly damming small rivers, were a new style within the English landscape, a "gardenless" form of landscape gardening, which swept away almost all the remnants of previous formally patterned styles.
His landscapes were at the forefront of fashion. They were fundamentally different from what they replaced, the well-known formal gardens of England that were criticized by Alexander Pope and others from the 1710s. Starting in 1719, William Kent replaced these with more naturalistic compositions, which reached their greatest refinement in Brown's "grammatical" landscapes. At Hampton Court Brown encountered Hannah More in 1782 and described his manner in her terms: "'Now ''there' said he, pointing his finger, 'I make a comma, and there' pointing to another spot, 'where a more decided turn is proper, I make a colon; at another part, where an interruption is desirable to break the view, a parenthesis; now a full stop, and then I begin another subject'".[2] Brown's patrons saw the idealized landscapes he was creating for them in terms of the Italian landscape painters they admired and collected, as Kenneth Woodbridge first observed in the landscape at Stourhead, a "Brownian" landscape with an un-Brownian circuit walk in which Brown himself was not involved.
At Blenheim Brown dammed the paltry stream flowing under Vanbrugh's Grand Bridge, drowning half the structure with improved results

Russell Page, who began his career in the Brownian landscape of Longleat but whose own designs have formal structure, accused Brown of "encouraging his wealthy clients to tear out their splendid formal gardens and replace them with his facile compositions of grass, tree clumps and rather shapeless pools and lakes".[3] Richard Owen Cambridge, the English poet and satirical author, declared that he hoped to die before Brown so that he could "see heaven before it was 'improved'". This was a typical statement reflecting the controversy about Brown's work, which has continued over the last 200 years. By contrast, a recent historian and author, Richard Bisgrove, described Brown's process as perfecting nature by
:''judicious manipulation of its components, adding a tree here or a concealed head of water there. His art attended to the formal potential of ground, water, trees and so gave to English landscape its ideal forms. The difficulty was that less capable imitators and less sophisticated spectators did not see nature perfected... they saw simply what they took to be nature.''
This deftness of touch was not unrecognized in his own day; one anonymous obituary writer opined: "Such, however, was the effect of his genius that when he was the happiest man, he will be least remembered; so closely did he copy nature that his works will be mistaken". Sir William Chambers, who considered himself a garden authority as well, complained that Brown's grounds "differ very little from common fields, so closely is nature copied in most of them".[4]
Brown's popularity declined rapidly after his death, because his work was seen as a feeble imitation of wild nature. A reaction against the smooth blandness of Brown's landscapes was inevitable. They lacked the sublime thrill that members of the Romantic generation like Richard Payne Knight and Uvedale Price looked for in an ideal landscape, where the painterly inspiration would come from Salvator Rosa rather than Claude Lorraine. During the nineteenth century he was criticised by almost everyone but during the twentieth century his popularity returned. Tom Turner has suggested that this resulted from a favourable account of his talent in Marie-Luise Gothein's ''History of Garden Art'' which predated Christopher Hussey's positive account of Brown in ''The Picturesque'' (1927). Dorothy Stroud wrote the first full monograph on Capability Brown, fleshing out the generic attributions with documentation from country house estate offices
Brown died in 1783, in Hertford Street, London, on the doorstep of his daughter Bridget who had married the architect Henry Holland. Horace Walpole wrote to Lady Ossory: "Your dryads must go into black gloves, Madam, their father-in-law, Lady Nature’s second husband, is dead!"[5] He was buried in the churchyard of St. Peter and St. Paul, the parish church of Brown's small estate Fenstanton Manor.
Humphry Repton observed that Brown "fancied himself an architect"[6] but Brown's work as an architect is overshadowed by his great reputation as a designer of landscapes. Repton was bound to add "he was inferior to none in what related to the comfort, convenience, taste and propriety of design, in the several mansions and other buildings which he planned." Some of his architecture was carried out in collaboration with his son-in-law Henry Holland, whose initial carrer Brown supported. Fisherwick, Staffordshire and Claremont, Surrey, were classical, while at Corsham his outbuildings are in a Gothick vein.

Gardens and parks


Many of Capability Brown's parks and gardens may still be visited today. A partial list of his landscapes:


Adderbury, Oxfordshire

Addington Place, Croydon

Alnwick Castle, Northumberland

Althorp, Northamptonshire

Ampthill, Bedfordshire

Ancaster House, Richmond, Surrey

Appuldurcombe, Isle of Wight

Ashburnham Place, East Sussex

Ashridge, Hertfordshire

Aske Hall, North Yorkshire

Aston, near Sheffield

Astrop, Northamptonshire

Audley End, Essex

Aynhoe Park, Northamptonshire

Badminton House, Gloucestershire

Basildon, near Reading

Battle Abbey, East Sussex

Beaudesert, Staffordshire

Beechwood, Bedfordshire

Belhus, Essex

Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire

Benham, Berkshire

Benwell Tower, near Newcastle on Tyne

Berrington, Herefordshire

Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire

Boarstall, Buckinghamshire

Bowood House, Wiltshire

Branches, Suffolk

Brentford, Ealing

Brightling, Sussex

Broadlands, Hampshire

Brockelsby, Lincolnshire

Burghley House, Cambridgeshire

Burton Constable Hall, East Riding of Yorkshire

Burton Park, West Sussex

Burton Pynsent

Byram, West Yorkshire

Cadland, Hampshire

Cambridge, The Backs

Capheaton, Northumberland

Cardiff Castle

Castle Ashby, Northamptonshire

Caversham, Berkshire

Chalfont House, Buckinghamshire

Charlecote, Warwickshire

Charlton, Wiltshire

Chatsworth, Derbyshire

Chilham Castle, Kent

Chillington Hall, West Midlands

Church Stretton Old Rectory, Shropshire

Clandon Park, Surrey

Claremont, Surrey

Clumber Park, Nottinghamshire

Corsham Court

Croome Park

Euston Hall

Fawley Court, Oxfordshire

Grimsthorpe Castle

Harewood House

Highclere Castle

Holkham Hall, Norfolk

Holland Park, London

The Hoo, Hertfordshire

Hornby Castle, North Yorkshire

Howsham, near York

Ickworth, Suffolk

Ingestre, Staffordshire

Ingress Abbey,

Kelston, Avon

Kew Gardens, SW London

Kiddington, Oxfordshire

Kimberley, Norfolk

Kimbolton Castle, Cambridgeshire

King's Weston, Bristol

Kirkharle, Northumberland

Kirtlington, Oxfordshire

Knowsley, Liverpool

Kyre Park, Herefordshire

Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire

Laleham Abbey, Surrey

Langley, Berkshire (was Buckinghamshire)

Langley, Norfolk

Latimer, Buckinghamshire

Leeds Abbey , near Leeds Castle, Kent

Littlegrove, Barnet, London

Lleweni Hall, Clwyd

Longford Castle, Wiltshire

Longleat, Wiltshire

Lowther, Cumbria

Luton Hoo, Bedfordshire

Madingley, Cambridgeshire

Maiden Earley, Berkshire

Mamhead, Devon

Melton Constable, Norfolk

Milton Abbey, Dorset

Moccas, Herefordhsire

Moor Park, Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire

Mount Clare, south west London

Navestock, Essex

Newnham Paddox, Warwickshire

Newton Park, Newton St Loe, Avon

North Cray Place, near Sidcup, Bexley, London

North Stoneham, Southampton, Hampshire

Nuneham Courtenay, Oxfordshire

Oakley, Shropshire

Packington Park

Paddenswick Manor, West London

Patshull, Staffordshire

Paultons, Hampshire

Peper Harow, Surrey

Peterborough House, Hammersmith, London

Petworth House, West Sussex

Pishiobury, Hertfordshire

Porter's Park, Hertfordshire

Prior Park

Ragley Hall

Schloss Richmond (Richmond Palace) in Braunschweig, Germany

Scampston Hall

Sheffield Park Garden

Sherborne Castle

Sledmere House

Stowe Landscape Garden

Syon House

Temple Newsam

Trentham Gardens

Warwick Castle

Wentworth Castle, South Yorkshire

West Hill, Putney, South London. Later part of the RHI and

Weston Park, Staffordshire

Whitehall, London

Whitley Beaumont, West Yorkshire

Widdicombe, Devon, near Slapton

Wilton, Wiltshire

Wimbledon House, south west London

Wimbledon Park, south west London

Wimpole Hall, Cambridgeshire

Woburn Abbey. Bedfordshire

Wolterton, Norfolk

Woodchester, Gloucestershire

Woodside, Berkshire

Wootton Place Rectory, Oxfordshire

Wotton, Buckinghamshire

Wrest Park, Bedfordshire

Wrotham, Hertfordhire

Wycombe Abbey, Buckinghamshire

Wynnstay, Clwyd, Wales

Youngsbury, Hampshire

★ Topland House, 73, South Audley Street, London (unconfirmed)

Brown's portrait by Nathaniel Dance, c. 1768, is conserved in the National Portrait Gallery, London.

See also



Thomas Blaikie, the Scottish gardener called the "French Capability Brown".

Landscape architecture

Bloody Stupid Johnson

Notes


1. Walpole, ''On Modern Gardening'', 1780.
2. Quoted in Peter Willis, "Capability Brown in Northumberland" ''Garden History'' '9'.2 (Autumn, 1981, pp. 157-183) p. 158).
3. Page, ''Education of a Gardener''.
4. Chambers, ''A Dissertation on Oriental Gardening'' (1772) p. v.
5. The Letters of Horace Walpole: Earl of Orford page 331
6. Repton, ''Observations on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening'', 1803.

References



★ Howard Colvin, ''A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840,'' 3rd ed. 1995.

★ Thomas Hinde. ''Capability Brown: The Story of a Master Gardener''. New York: W. W. Norton, 1987. ISBN 0-393-02421-0, ISBN 0-09-163740-6.

★ Dorothy Stroud. ''Capability Brown''. London: Faber and Faber, 2nd revised ed. 1975. ISBN 0-571-10267-0, ISBN 0-571-13405-X.

Roger Turner. ''Capability Brown and the Eighteenth Century English Landscape''. New York: Rizzoli, 1985. ISBN 0-8478-0643-X, ISBN 0-297-78734-9, ISBN 1-86077-114-9; 2nd edition, Phillimore, Chichester, 1999.

External links



Biographical information

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