In 1726 Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, built an addition to his modest country house on the river Thames at Chiswick. Influenced by the architecture of the sixteenth-century Italian Andrea Palladio and by the British architects from Inigo Jones to James Gibbs and Colen Campbell who followed in Palladio's footsteps, Lord Burlington raised a freestanding "villa," an English response to Palladio's famous Villa Rotonda. The villa, with sumptuous interiors designed by William Kent, was as distinguished as any designed by Palladio or Jones. The building became the touchstone of Neo-Palladian architecture; its architect became known as the "Modern Vitruvius," the "Apollo of the Arts."
This lavishly illustrated book focuses on the creation of this famous "Villa by the Thames." John Harris explores the villa's architectural sources of inspiration and the evolution of its design, examining and reproducing paintings, watercolors, drawings (including those of Palladio and Inigo Jones owned by Lord Burlington), plans and elevations, and books and prints. He also charts the transformation of the grounds from seventeenth-century formality to eighteenth-century variety, reproducing rare garden studies by Kent, as well as numerous topographical views that record the transformation into an arcadian landscape.
The book, which serves as the catalogue of an exhibition to be seen in Montreal, Pittsburgh, and London, is richly illustrated with material still largely in the collection of Burlington's heirs, the dukes of Devonshire, at Chatsworth.
- ISBN10 0300059841
- ISBN13 9780300059847
- Publish Date 31 August 1994 (first published 1 August 1994)
- Publish Status Out of Stock
- Out of Print 29 August 2009
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Yale University Press
- Edition New edition
- Format Paperback
- Pages 224
- Language English