Leighton House Museum

The Leighton House Museum is an art museum in the Holland Park area of the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in west London.

Leighton House Museum
LocationHolland Park
London, W14
United Kingdom
Coordinates51°29′54.89″N 0°12′11.12″W
Built1866–95
ArchitectGeorge Aitchison
Governing bodyKensington and Chelsea Borough Council
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official name: Leighton House
Designated30 August 1961[1]
Reference no.1191541
Location of Leighton House Museum in Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea

The building was the London home of painter Frederic Leighton, 1st Baron Leighton (18301896), who commissioned the architect and designer George Aitchison to build him a combined home and studio noted for its incorporation of tiles and other elements purchased in the Near East to build a magnificent Qa'a (room). The resulting building, completed 1866–95, on the privately owned Ilchester Estate, is now Grade II* listed. It is noted for its elaborate Orientalist and aesthetic interiors.[1]

The house

The museum has been open to the public since 1929. In 1958 the London County Council commemorated Leighton with a blue plaque at the museum.[2] The museum was awarded the European Union Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Award in 2012.[3][4] It is open daily except Tuesdays, and is a companion museum to 18 Stafford Terrace, another Victorian artist's home in Kensington.

The house's pseudo-Islamic court has featured as a set in various film and television programs, such as Nicholas Nickleby (2002), Brazil (1985), and an episode of the drama series Spooks, as well as the music video for the songs "Golden Brown" by The Stranglers and "Gold" by Spandau Ballet.

Design and construction

The dome of the Arab Hall
Tile work in the Arab Hall

Aitchison designed the first part of the house (2 Holland Park Road, later renumbered as 12) in 1864, although Leighton was not granted a lease on the land until April 1866.[5] Building commenced shortly afterwards, and the house, which cost £4500 equivalent to £445,717 in 2019, was ready for occupation by the end of the year.[6] The building is of red Suffolk bricks with Caen Stone dressings in a restrained Classical style.

The architect extended the building over 30 years; the first phase was only three windows wide. The main room was the first floor studio, facing north, originally 45 by 25 feet, with a large central window to provide plenty of light for painting. There was also a gallery at the east end, and a separate staircase for use by models.[6] The house was extended to the east in 1869–70. Additionally, a major extension was made in 1877–79: the two-storey "Arab Hall," built to house Leighton's collection of tiles collected during visits to the Middle East.[6]

According to Aitchison and Walter Crane, the design was based on the palace of La Zisa in Palermo. The 17th-century tiles are complemented by carved wooden lattice-work windows of the same period from Damascus. There are also large 16th-century Turkish tiles. The west wall has a wooden alcove with inset 14th-century tiles.

The room also contains Victorian elements. The capitals of the smaller columns are by Sir Joseph Boehm, from Aitchison's designs. The capitals of the large columns, gilded and carved in the shape of birds, are by Randolph Caldecot. The mosaic frieze was designed by Walter Crane. The marble work was by George P. White. Elaborate decorative paintwork adorns the domed ceiling and in the centre of the floor there is a fountain. The tiles in the passage to the Arab Hall are by William de Morgan.

In 1889 an additional winter studio was added to the building. The final addition by Aitchison was the top-lit picture gallery in 1895. After Leighton died in 1896, the contents of the house were sold, including at least one thousand of his own drawings, almost all of which were bought by the Fine Art Society. In 1927 Mrs Henry Perrin offered to pay for additional gallery space. The building was extended to the designs of Halsey Ricardo and the Perrin Galleries opened in 1929.[6] This extension was in memory of Mrs Perrin's daughter Muriel Ida Perrin, an artist and sculptor[7] who had trained at the Royal College of Art [8] and worked for the catalogue section of the Aircraft Manufacturing Company (Airco) during the First World War.

Permanent collection

The End of the Quest (1921) by Frank Bernard Dicksee.

The museum has on permanent display works of art by various members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, including John Everett Millais, Edward Burne-Jones and George Frederick Watts, as well as 81 oil paintings by Leighton himself.

Some of the most notable oil paintings by Leighton in the collection are:

  • The Death of Brunelleschi – 1852
  • Charles Edward Perugini – 1855
  • A Noble Lady of Venice – c1865
  • Hercules Wrestling with Death for the Body of Alcestes – 1869–71
  • Clytemnestra from the Battlements of Argos Watches for the Beacon Fires Which Are to Announce the Return of Agamemnon – c1874
  • Professor Giovanni Costa – 1878
  • The Countess of Brownlow – c1878–79
  • The Vestal – c1882-3
  • Alexandra Sutherland Orr (née Leighton) – 1890
  • And the sea gave up the dead which were in it – c1891–92
Self portrait of Leighton (1880)

Other works by Leighton in the collection include:

  • 5 albums and sketchbooks of drawings and watercolours.
  • 27 watercolours.
  • 54 prints of Leighton's works.
  • 14 items of personal material including documents, personal mementos, embroideries, enamels and caricatures.
  • Several small scale sculptures including: Athlete Strangling a Python (1874) and Needless Alarms (1887).

Works in the collection not by Leighton include:

  • Antonio Rossellino's carved and coloured relief: Madonna of the Candleabra, which had been in Leighton's collection, sold after his death and re-acquired by the Museum in 2006.
  • G.F. Watts portrait of Frederic Leighton.
  • Luke Fildes's still life and study for The Widower.
  • Sir Alfred Gilbert's original sketch model for Eros.

In 2016 Leighton's famous painting Flaming June was loaned to the Museum, and was displayed in the studio in which it was created.

,

Council arts strategy

The building is run by the Kensington and Chelsea Borough Council. In 2009 Nicholas Paget-Brown launched the Cultural Placemaking initiative as part of the Council's Arts and Culture Policy. He explained that the plan was to build on the work of Opera Holland Park and Leighton House Museum to develop a broader coherent strategy to encourage developers to consider the Council's creative and artistic ambitions when working on a development project.[9]

gollark: That's not related to problem-solving ability or reasoning ability or mathematical ability or anything.
gollark: No, that is a measure of persistence.
gollark: This is more realistic than other IQ tests, which test performance on contextless oversimplified problems with single fixed answers.
gollark: My IQ test is designed to provide real-world metrics by testing your performance on incomprehensible poorly explained questions.
gollark: https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=9c5Mt1ATOky_9fn6gQjdfq-M8WblOp5OuvJjhe8iFthUNEQwRDVBT09DVlY1SzYwNkVDWEdER0hNRS4u

See also

References

  1. Historic England. "Leighton House (1191541)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  2. "Leighton, Frederick, Lord Leighton (1830–1896)". English Heritage. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  3. "EU Prize For Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards 2012". Europa Nostra. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  4. "Winners of 2012 EU Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards announced". European Commission. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  5. Dakers 1999, p. 60.
  6. Sheppard 1973, p. 126–150.
  7. "The Church of St. Peter". Church of St.Peter, Bushey Heath, Hertfordshire. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  8. Bryon Parkin, The Arts and Crafts of Bushey Heath (Bushey Museum Trust, 2003), p. 12
  9. "Creative Spirit". Leisure Management. No. 4. 2012.

Sources

Further reading

  • Barrington, Russell, Mrs (1906). The life, letters and work of Frederic Leighton (2 Volumes). London: George Allen. Volume 1, Volume 2
  • Millner, Arthur (2015). Damascus Tiles: Mamluk and Ottoman Architectural Ceramics from Syria. Munich: Prestel. ISBN 978-3-7913-8147-3.
  • Robbins, Daniel. (2011) Leighton House Museum Kensington and Chelsea Borough Council (KCBC) ISBN 978-0-90224-223-4
  • Robbins, Daniel and Dakers, Caroline. (2011) George Aitchison: Leighton's architect revealed (KCBC) ISBN 978-0-90224-279-1
  • Various. (2010) Closer to Home: The Restoration of Leighton House and Catalogue of the Reopening Displays 2010 (KCBC)
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