
William Kent
'William Kent' (born in
Bridlington,
Yorkshire, c.
1685 -
April 12,
1748) was an eminent
English architect,
landscape architect and
furniture designer of the early
18th century.
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, where he met
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), 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. 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
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. 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 in 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."
External links
★
Short biography on gardenvisit.com
★
Short biography on britainexpress.com
★
Design examples on furniturestyles.net
Bibliography
★ Hunt, John Dixon, ''Garden and Grove: Italian Renaissance Garden and the English Imagination, 1600-1750'', London, 1986, and pbk. London and Philadephia, 1996.
★ 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. (1936). ''Landscape design a cultural and architectural history''. New York:
Harry N. Abrams, Inc.