KENT, William - b. ~1685 Bridlington, d. 1748 London - WGA

KENT, William

(b. ~1685 Bridlington, d. 1748 London)

English architect, interior designer, landscape gardener, and painter, a principal master of the Palladian architectural style in England and pioneer in the creation of the “informal” English garden.

Kent was said to have been apprenticed to a coach painter at Hull. Local patrons, impressed by his talent, sent him to study painting in Rome from 1709 to 1719. There he studied under Benedetto Luti.

In Rome he also met the Earl of Burlington, the foremost architectural patron of the 18th century in England and the principal promoter of Andrea Palladio’s classical building style (Palladianism). He took Kent back to London in 1719 to decorate Burlington House in Piccadilly, where Kent then lived for the rest of his life. The association with Burlington had a determining effect on Kent’s rather severe architectural style, which was characterized by well-proportioned masses arranged in simple relationships. Although later Neoclassical architects, such as Robert Adam, were to criticize Kent’s works as “immeasurably ponderous,” his influence on them was considerable. Kent was also familiar with the style of Inigo Jones, whose Designs (published 1727) Kent edited.

By the 1730s Kent had become a fashionable architect. Among his principal buildings is Holkham Hall, Norfolk (begun 1734). Here, as in other works, Kent designed interiors and even furniture, becoming one of the earliest English architects to plan a house in one unified design scheme. Kent’s best known works came out of his appointment, through Burlington’s influence, as a master carpenter in the Office of Works (1725). The Royal Mews (1732), the treasury buildings, Whitehall (1734-36), and the Horse Guards Building in Whitehall (1750-58; completed after Kent’s death) are all part of Burlington’s grand intention of rectifying the sorry state of England’s architecture by adhering more closely to classical precedent.

The rather theatrical interiors of some of these structures, as of the masterful No. 44 Berkeley Square (1742-44), and Kent’s taste for fanciful Gothic style in furniture designs suggest that he wore his Palladianism lightly and that, in the absence of Burlington’s overpowering influence, Kent might as easily have become a master of the Baroque.

It was in his gardens - conceived of as natural landscapes to contrast with the classical severity of his buildings - that Kent may have achieved his freest expression. He created gardens at Rousham Hall, Oxfordshire (1738-41), and Stowe House, Buckinghamshire, where winding paths and open vistas lead to small classical temples in informal wooded glades. In describing the revolt from formality in garden design, Horace Walpole wrote that Kent saw that “all Nature was a garden.” The informal and irregular landscaping at these sites and others, such as Pope’s Villa, Twickenham, Middlesex (for Alexander Pope; c. 1730), and Richmond Gardens, Surrey, were a marked departure from the manicured, symmetrical precision of French gardens such as those at Versailles. The English style soon crossed the Channel and had a substantial impact in France during the second half of the 18th century.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

Holkham Hall is a country house located adjacent to the village of Holkham, Norfolk, England. The house was constructed in the Palladian style for Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester by the architect William Kent, aided by the architect and aristocrat Lord Burlington.

Holkham Hall provides us with a monumental transformation of neo-Palladian ideas. The strictly symmetrical ground plan is composed of a central elevation with reception rooms and four service buildings connected to it by corridors. It culminates in the almost religious effect of the entrance hall, where the staircase, surrounded by columns, leads up to the piano nobile. Roman proportions are evoked through the use of costly materials, classical friezes, and above all, a formal coffered ceiling.

The picture shows the main fa�ade.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

Holkham Hall is a country house located adjacent to the village of Holkham, Norfolk, England. The house was constructed in the Palladian style for Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester by the architect William Kent, aided by the architect and aristocrat Lord Burlington.

Holkham Hall provides us with a monumental transformation of neo-Palladian ideas. The strictly symmetrical ground plan is composed of a central elevation with reception rooms and four service buildings connected to it by corridors. It culminates in the almost religious effect of the entrance hall, where the staircase, surrounded by columns, leads up to the piano nobile. Roman proportions are evoked through the use of costly materials, classical friezes, and above all, a formal coffered ceiling.

The picture shows the main fa�ade.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

Holkham Hall is a country house located adjacent to the village of Holkham, Norfolk, England. The house was constructed in the Palladian style for Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester by the architect William Kent, aided by the architect and aristocrat Lord Burlington.

Holkham Hall provides us with a monumental transformation of neo-Palladian ideas. The strictly symmetrical ground plan is composed of a central elevation with reception rooms and four service buildings connected to it by corridors. It culminates in the almost religious effect of the entrance hall, where the staircase, surrounded by columns, leads up to the piano nobile. Roman proportions are evoked through the use of costly materials, classical friezes, and above all, a formal coffered ceiling.

The picture shows the staircase.

General view
General view by

General view

The photo shows the south view of Holkham Hall.

The severely Palladian south fa�ade with its Ionic portico is devoid of arms or motif; not even a blind window is allowed to break the void between the windows and roof-line, while the lower windows are mere piercings in the stark brickwork. The only hint of ornamentation is from the two terminating Venetian windows.

Interior view
Interior view by

Interior view

Holkham Hall is a country house located adjacent to the village of Holkham, Norfolk, England. The house was constructed in the Palladian style for Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester by the architect William Kent, aided by the architect and aristocrat Lord Burlington.

Holkham Hall provides us with a monumental transformation of neo-Palladian ideas. The strictly symmetrical ground plan is composed of a central elevation with reception rooms and four service buildings connected to it by corridors. It culminates in the almost religious effect of the entrance hall, where the staircase, surrounded by columns, leads up to the piano nobile. Roman proportions are evoked through the use of costly materials, classical friezes, and above all, a formal coffered ceiling.

The picture shows the staircase.

Interior view
Interior view by

Interior view

The cheerful decorative side of the early Gothic Revival is represented particularly well by the small church built by a friend of Horace Walpole, Richard Bateman (1705-1773) on his estate in Shobdon. It was built to plans by William Kent, who is otherwise known for his work in the Palladian style. On the outside, St. John the Evangelist looks just like a medieval parish church with its heavy battlements and central west tower. Inside, it is entirely white and pale blue, and dominated by that favourite Gothic Revival motif, the crocketed ogee arch. Quatrefoil tracery adorns the windows, and the same vocabulary is found in the pews and pulpit.

The photo shows the interior from north-east.

Temple of Concord and Victory
Temple of Concord and Victory by

Temple of Concord and Victory

Until the mid-eighteenth century, British architecture was wholly dominated by Palladianism. However, the supremacy of the Palladianism was on the wane in the second half of the century. The roughly simultaneous “discoveries” of both Greek Antiquity and the Middle Ages (the Gothic architecture) around the mid-eighteenth century brought with them a a basic, revolutionary change in historical perceptions of the time. When British architects and patrons now looked for a model for the design of their buildings, there was no longer a universally valid standard such as there had been in Palladianism up to the beginning of the eighteenth century. Now there were different styles of equal status from which one could choose.

In the park of Stowe in Buckinghamshire, a “Greek Valley” was created, presided over by a Greek temple containing a statue of Libertas Publica inside and the figure of Britannia on the tympanum. Although the structure is wholly modeled on antique models, they are not Greek models, which were not even known at the time, but in fact Roman, rather like the Maison Carr�e in Nimes, which the client may have seen on his Grand Tour.

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