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'Our Great Master Kent' and the Design of Holkham Hall: A Reassessment

Author(s):
Medium: journal article
Language(s): English
Published in: Architectural History, , v. 56
Page(s): 63-96
DOI: 10.1017/s0066622x00002458
Abstract:

Few questions have more exercised historians of eighteenth-century British architecture over several generations than that of the authorship of the design of Holkham Hall in Norfolk. The house, built between 1734 and 1765, is the quintessential domestic example of English Palladianism at its most Neoclassically extreme. Almost every feature of Holkham's exterior elevations replicates motifs to be found in Antiquity, transmitted through Andrea Palladio or other sixteenth- and seventeenth-century sources, whilst inside not a single painted god, hero or saint complicates the clearly defined surfaces of the damasked walls or coffered ceilings. As a result, Holkham is a building of high international importance since, as John Summerson put it in describing the roots of later eighteenth-century Neoclassicism, it was in earlier eighteenth-century England that ‘the first categorical revolt against the Baroque and the first architectural statements of the new attitude are to be observed'.

Structurae cannot make the full text of this publication available at this time. The full text can be accessed through the publisher via the DOI: 10.1017/s0066622x00002458.
  • About this
    data sheet
  • Reference-ID
    10307693
  • Published on:
    01/03/2019
  • Last updated on:
    09/08/2019
 
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