Enfilade

Attingham Courses in 2024

Posted in opportunities by Editor on January 4, 2024

View of Versailles with the Royal Stables in the Foreground
(Versailles: Musée Lambinet)

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This year’s Attingham offerings:

The Attingham Summer School, 29 June — 14 July 2024
Applications due by 28 January

The 71st Attingham Summer School, a 16-day residential course directed by David Adshead and Tessa Wild, will visit country houses in Sussex, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Derbyshire, Northamptonshire, Wiltshire, and Dorset. From West Dean, our first base, we will study, amongst other houses and gardens: the complex overlays of Arundel Castle, the ancestral seat of the Dukes of Norfolk; Petworth House, where the patronage of great British artists such as Turner and Flaxman enrich its Baroque interiors; Parham, a fine Elizabethan house in an unrivalled setting and Standen, an Arts and Crafts reinterpretation of the country house.

In the Midlands a series of related houses will be examined: Hardwick Hall, unique amongst Elizabethan houses for its survival of late 16th-century decoration and contents; Bolsover Castle, a Jacobean masque setting frozen in stone and Chatsworth, where the collections and gardens of the Cavendishes and Dukes of Devonshires span more than four centuries. Other highlights include the superb collections and landscaped gardens at Boughton House, ‘the English Versailles’.

Based in Salisbury, the final part of the course will explore the estates and collections of Dorset and Wiltshire. Our itinerary will include Wilton House, the fine Palladian seat of the Earls of Pembroke, renowned for its state rooms and outstanding art collection; Henry Hoare II and Henry Flitcroft’s magnificent garden at Stourhead, the superlative example of the 18th-century English landscape garden style; and Kingston Lacey, home of the collector, traveller and pioneering Egyptologist William John Bankes, who spent the last fourteen years of his life in exile in Venice, from where he continued to embellish the interiors and add to his significant collections.

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Royal Collection Studies, 1–10 September 2024
Applications due by 11 February

The Royal Collection is one of the world’s leading collections of fine and decorative art, with over one million works from six continents, many of them masterpieces. Working in partnership with The Royal Collection Trust, this ten-day residential course offers participants the opportunity to study the magnificent holdings of paintings, furniture, metalwork, porcelain, jewellery, sculpture, arms and armour, books and works on paper and to examine the architecture and interiors of the palaces which house them.

Based near Windsor, the course also examines the history of the collection and the key roles played by monarchs and their consorts over the centuries. Combining a mixture of lectures and tutorials, visits to both the occupied and unoccupied palaces in and around London and close-up object study, Royal Collection Studies aims to give experienced professionals in the heritage sector a deeper understanding of this remarkable collection.

The course is intended to be interactive, with participants asked to contribute and participate in group discussions. As with all Attingham courses, the group is encouraged to engage with current curatorial debates, questions of display and interpretation and, in this instance, the issues surrounding a working collection. During the course, members find that they build an invaluable network for the ongoing exchange of ideas and expertise.

Royal Collection Studies is organised on broadly chronological principles, developing an understanding of the changing function and character of the British Royal Collection. The course is held when the Royal Family is not in residence and Windsor Castle is the central focus. The programme explores palaces past and present and five centuries of collecting and display, covering all aspects of the collection.

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Attingham Study Programme: Arts and Crafts Houses and Gardens, 16–22 September 2024
Applications due by 11 February

This seven-day study programme will explore the origins and evolution of the Arts and Crafts movement in England by studying the work of its leading architects and designers and considering its influence here and abroad. We will be based in Surrey and Gloucestershire and will examine houses, gardens and collections in Kent, Sussex, Surrey, Oxfordshire, Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, and Herefordshire.

The course will begin with the two influential houses which bookend the architect Philip Webb’s career: Red House, designed for William Morris in 1859–60, and Standen, his most complete surviving work, with its fine collection of original Morris & Co. furnishings, furniture, and decorative arts. We will explore the extraordinary creative partnership between Gertrude Jekyll and Edwin Lutyens at Munstead Wood, where Jekyll’s skill as a designer and horticulturist finds perfect expression in her own garden which clothes the house designed for her by Lutyens. We will also visit Vann, where the architect W D Caröe extended his 16th-century house and commissioned Jekyll to create a water garden in 1911. From Surrey, we will travel to Morris’s country home at Kelmscott Manor and on to Gloucestershire where we will spend time studying the pre-eminent Arts and Crafts collections of The Wilson in Cheltenham. Among the houses and gardens we will explore in this area, are Rodmarton Manor, designed by Ernest Gimson for Claud and Margaret Biddulph, and recognised as the last and greatest of the houses, entirely built and with its furniture made to Arts and Crafts ideals using local materials and craftspeople. At Owlpen Manor, which the architect, Norman Jewson, discovered in a state of near-dereliction and acquired in 1925, in order to repair it and ensure its survival, we will study the Mander family’s wonderful collection. We will then spend a day at two superb and highly contrasting houses near Malvern, the moated 19th-century Madresfield Court, home to the Lygon family for over 900 years, with its library by CR Ashbee and the Guild of Handicraft and exceptional chapel and Perrycroft, designed by CFA Voysey as a country retreat for JW Wilson MP in 1893–94, on a spectacular sloping site in the Malvern Hills.

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Court Culture and the Horse, 1700–1900: Versailles, Chantilly, and Compiègne, 6–11 October 2024
Applications due by 11 February

This intensive short course will explore the central role of horses, ceremonial carriages and grand stable complexes within French court culture during the long 18th century. By connecting these objects and spaces with their immediate surroundings, we hope to reach a more nuanced understanding of their importance in French aristocratic life and of how this is reflected in the architecture, interiors and art collections of the palaces and chateaux we will be visiting.

The programme is planned to coincide with a major new exhibition entitled Cheval en majesté, au coeur d’une civilisation to be held at the Château de Versailles. We will spend the first full day of the course visiting the palace, including the great and small stables, highly important spaces often overlooked by visitors. From our hotel in the 19th arrondissement, we will travel by coach to the Château de Chantilly to study the spectacular 18th-century stables (the largest princely stables in Europe), the newly redisplayed Musée du Cheval, and the interiors and collections of the château. A day will be spent at the Château de Compiègne, a palace built to indulge Louis XV’s passion for hunting and now also the home of the Musée Nationale de la Voiture, established in 1927, comprising the foremost collection of horse-drawn vehicles, harnesses and livery in France. Other visits in Paris will explore smaller spaces with equine connections, including the cavalry department of the Republican Guard who were responsible for protecting the Kings of France and who now play an important ceremonial role.

Frick Director Ian Wardropper to Retire in 2025 

Posted in museums by Editor on January 4, 2024

From the museum press release (3 January 2024) . . .

 Ian Wardropper standing outside wearing a coat and scarfThe Frick Collection announced today that Ian Wardropper, the institution’s Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Director, will retire in 2025 following fourteen years of service to the Frick and a fifty-year museum career. During his tenure as the Frick’s director, Wardropper led the museum and library through a period of strategic and measured growth, which included the first comprehensive renovation and upgrade of the Frick’s historic buildings in nearly ninety years and a focused acquisitions program that has enhanced the institution’s art and library collections. He also prioritized accessibility and public outreach, spearheading innovative strategies and partnerships that enabled audiences to experience the museum and library in new ways. This has ranged from inventive online programs including Cocktails with a Curator to partnerships with the Ghetto Film School to the conceptualization and management of Frick Madison, which enabled the Frick’s collections and programs to be enjoyed throughout the institution’s renovation and enhancement project.

The Board of Trustees is working with an executive search firm to conduct an international search for the Frick’s next director. Wardropper will be honored for his innumerable contributions to the museum and the arts community at large at the institution’s fall 2024 gala, which precedes the public reopening of the museum and library in late 2024. . . .

The full press release is available here»

Robin Pogrebin covered the story yesterday for The New York Times.

The Furniture History Society’s Early Career Symposium

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on January 4, 2024

Event banner with four details (caption included at the bottom of this posting).

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From The Furniture History Society, with registration at Eventbrite:

The Furniture History Society Early Career Research Symposium
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 24 January 2024

The Furniture History Society is delighted to hold its seventh Early Career Research Symposium at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York on Wednesday, 24th January. The symposium is part of our Early Career Development (ECD) programme and presents current research by emerging scholars in the fields of furniture history, the decorative arts, and historic interiors. The wide range of papers reflects the variety of interests among young scholars with speakers from Britain, the Czech Republic, France, Italy, and the United States. We welcome curators, dealers, academics, members of the Furniture History Society, and anyone interested in the decorative arts and the history of interiors to join us for this symposium to enjoy the fascinating medley of topics, ranging from the 1650s to the 1950s. The event is free, but it is necessary to register here on Eventbrite by midnight Sunday, 21st January to secure a place. This event is neither being recorded nor livestreamed.

The day is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Oliver Ford Trust.

p r o g r a m m e

9.30  Welcome

9.45  Morning Session A
• Cynthia Kok (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam) Ebonyworkers in 17th-Century Amsterdam
• Bridget Griffin (The Attingham Trust, London), Crafting Connections: Mapping the Lives and Trade Networks of British and Irish Immigrant Furniture Makers in North-Eastern Port Cities of Early America
• Grace Ford-Dirks (Philadelphia Museum of Art), Exploring the Lives and Meanings of an 18th-Century Caribbean Armoire

11.15  Break

11.45  Morning Session B
• Noah Dubay (Bard Graduate Center, New York), Comfort, Convenience, and Convalescence: How the Fauteuil de Malade Changed 18th-Century France
• Geoffrey Ripart (Bard Graduate Center, New York), The Road from Rome to Paris: Sourcing Rare Marbles at the End of the Ancien Regime and the Rise of French Taste for Objets d’Art Made from Stone, 1760–1810

12.45  Lunch Break

1.45  Afternoon Session A
• Romana Mastrella (University of La Sapienza, Rome), Collecting Fireplaces
• Justine Gain (École de Louvre, Paris), When the Furniture Matches the Architecture: The Birth of French Eclecticism through the Oeuvre of Jean-Baptiste Plantar (1790–1879)
• Laura Jenkins (Courtauld Institute of Art, London) From Galerie to Ballroom: Gilbert Cuel at 1 West 57th Street

3.15  Break

3.45  Afternoon Session B
• Karolina Kourilova (Masaryk University, Brno), Design behind the Iron Curtain: Furniture Industry Development in Post-War Czechoslovakia
• Melania Andronic (University of La Sapienza, Rome), Rational Furniture: A Chair Is Made for Sitting

4.45  Closing Remarks

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Images: Detail of a fireplace, 1785, by Luigi Valadier in the Sala della Flora on the first floor of the Villa Borghese in Rome. Detail of a cabinet attributed to Herman Doomer, Amsterdam ca. 1640–50 (New York: The Met). Detail of a drawing by Jean-Baptiste Plantar in the Album d’une centaine de dessins d’architecture, Paris, ca. 1855 (held online by the Institut national d’histoire de l’art). Detail of the Galerie dorée at the Hôtel de Toulouse (now Banque de France), decorated by Robert de Cotte and Francois-Antoine Vasse, 1713–17 (photo by Guilhem Vellut).