Jump to content

Matthew Brettingham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Giano (talk | contribs) at 19:51, 12 January 2005 (→‎Conclusion: clarity). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Holkham Hall. Matthew Brettingham's first notable employment was here as Clerk of the Works and executive architect in 1739.

Matthew Brettingham (16991769), sometimes called Matthew Brettingham the Elder, was an 18th-century Englishman who rose from humble origins to supervise the construction of Holkham Hall, eventually becoming one of the country's better known architects of his generation. Much of his principal work is now demolished, especially his work in London where he revolutionised the design of the grand town house. As a result he tends to be often overlooked today, remembered only for his Palladian remodelling of numerous country houses, many of which are situated in the East Anglian area of Britain. As the pinnacle of Brettingham's career came into sight, Palladianism began to fall out of fashion and neoclassicism was introduced, championed by a young Robert Adam. A simple analogy of his long career is that Brettingham played Salieri to Robert Adam's Mozart.

Early life

Brettingham was born in 1699, the son of Launcelot Brettingham, a bricklayer living in Norwich, a large town in Norfolk, England. His early life is little documented and one of the earliest recorded references to him is in 1719, when he and his brother Robert are admitted as freemen to the city of Norwich as bricklayers. A critic of Brettingham's at this time claimed that the work was so poor, it was not worth the nine shillings a week he was paid as a craftsman bricklayer. Whatever the quality of his bricklaying, he soon advanced himself and became a building contractor.

Local contractor

During the early 18th century a building contractor was far more responsible than the title suggests today, as a contractor often designed, built and oversaw all details of construction to completion; architects, often called surveyors, were only employed for the grandest and largest of buildings. By 1730, Matthew Brettingham is referred to as a surveyor and working on more important structures than cottages and agricultural buildings. In 1731 it is recorded he was paid £112 for his work on Norwich Gaol. From then, he appears to have worked regularly as the surveyor to the Justices (the contemporary local authority) on public buildings and bridges through to the 1740s. One project from this time was the remodelling of the Shirehouse in Norwich. Brettingham had been employed to redesign and oversee the project. His work on this building, which was in the gothic style and showed a versatility of design rare for Brettingham, was to result in a protracted court case which was to rumble on throughout a large part of his life, with unfounded allegations of financial discrepancies. Eventually in 1755 the case was closed and Brettingham was left several hundred pounds out of pocket, and with a stain — if only a local one — on his character. Transcripts of the case suggest it was Brettingham's brother Robert to whom he had sub-contracted who may have been the cause of the allegations.

Architect

There is no evidence that Brettingham ever formally studied architecture or even travelled abroad. The Dictionary of National Biography reports him as having made two study trips abroad. However, this assumption was made on the strength of an anonymous book now ascribed to someone else, and the other as a result of confusion with his son Matthew Brettingham the Younger.

In 1734 Brettingham had his first great opportunity, when two of the foremost Palladian architects of the day, William Kent and Lord Burlington, were collaboratively designing a grandiose Palladian country palace at Holkham in Norfolk for the Earl of Leicester. Brettingham was appointed Clerk of Works, a position he was to retain until the completion of Holkham Hall in 1764. The illustrious architects were mostly absent, indeed Burlington was more of an idealist than an architect, and thus Brettingham and the patron Lord Leicester worked on the project together: the practical Brettingham interpreting the plans of the architects to Leicester's requirements. It was at Holkham that Brettingham first worked with the fashionable Palladian style, which was to be his trademark. Holkham was to be Brettingham's vaulting horse to fame, as it was through his association with it that he came to the note of other local patrons.

Brettingham was commissioned in 1740 to redesign Langly Hall, a mansion standing in its own parkland in South Norfolk. Brettingham's resultant design was very much in the Palladian style of Holkham, though much smaller: a large principal central block linked to two flanking secondary wings by short corridors. Ironically the corner towers, while similar to those later designed by Brettingham at Euston Hall, were the work of a later owner and architect. The neoclassical lodges were also a later addition, by Sir John Soane. Brettingham began work in 1745 on the construction of Hanworth Hall, Norfolk, which again is in the Palladian style with a 5-bay facade of brick with the centre three bays projected with a pediment. (similar to that at Gunton pictured below)

Gunton Hall, designed by Matthew Brettingham.

In 1745 Brettingham designed Gunton Hall in Norfolk for Sir William Harbourd, the former house on the site having been gutted by fire in 1742. The new house of brick had a principal facade like that of Hanworth Hall with five bays, with the centre projected and pedimented. However, this larger house was seven bays deep, and had a large service wing on its western side.

In 1750, now well known, the architect received an important commission to remodel Euston Hall, coincidentally in East Anglia, the Norfolk country seat of the influential Duke of Grafton. The original house, built circa 1666 in the French style, was built around a central court with large pavilions at each corner. While keeping the original layout, Brettingham formalised the fenestration and imposed a more classically severe order whereby the pavilions were transformed to towers in the Palladian fashion (similar to those of Inigo Jones's at Wilton House) and the pavilion's domes were replaced by low pyramid roofs identical to those at Holkham. Brettingham also created the large service courtyard at Euston which now acts as the entrance court to the mansion, today a fraction of its former size.

The Euston commission seems to have brought Brettingham firmly to the notice of further wealthy patrons. In 1754 he began designing a new picture gallery for the Earl of Egremont at Petworth House, Suffolk, and continued work intermittently at Petworth for the next nine years.

The London House

From 1747 Brettingham had begun to operate from London as well as Norwich. This period marks a turning point in his career, as he was now no longer designing country houses and farm buildings just for the local aristocrats and the Norfolk gentry, but for the greater aristocracy based in London.

One of Brettingham's greatest solo commissions came when he was asked to designed a town house for the Duke of Norfolk in St James Square, London. Completed in 1756, this mansion was from the exterior similar to many of the great palazzi in Italian cities: bland and featureless, the piano nobile distinguishable only by its tall pedimented windows. This arrangement devoid of pilasters and a pediment giving prominence to the central bays at roof height was initially too severe, for the English taste, even by fashionable Palladian standards of the day, early critics declared the design "insipid".

However, the interior design of Norfolk House was to define the London town house for the next century, with a circuit of reception rooms around a grand staircase, the staircase hall replacing the Italian traditional inner courtyard or two-storey hall. This arrangement of salons allowed guests at large parties to circulate, having been received at the head of the staircase, without doubling back on arriving guests, the second advantage was that while each room had access to the next, it also had access to the central stairs, thus allowing only one or two rooms to be used at a time for smaller functions. Previously guests in London houses had had to reach the principal salon through a long enfilade of minor reception rooms. In this square and compact way Brettingham came close to re-creating the layout of an original Palladian Villa, transforming what Palladio had conceived of as a country retreat into a London mansion appropriate for the lifestyle of the British aristocracy with its reversal of the usual Italian domestic pattern of a large palazzo in town, and a smaller villa in the country. Robert Adam was later, as happened so often in Brettingham's career, to develop this design concept further and be credited with the success. However, Brettingham's plan for Norfolk House was to serve as the prototype for many London mansions over the following few decades.

Lord Egremont, for whom Brettingham was working in the country at Petworth also gave Brettingham another opportunity to design a grandiose London mansion — the Egremont family's town house. Begun in 1759, this Palladian palace, known at the time as Egremont House or more modestly as "94 Piccadilly", which also has an entrance facade in St James Square, is one of the few of the great London town houses still standing. It later became the home of Lord Palmerston, then The Naval & Military Club, and is as of 2005 in the process of conversion to a luxury hotel.

Kedleston Hall

Kedleston Hall was Brettingham's opportunity to prove himself capable of designing a house to rival Holkham Hall. The chance was snatched from him by Robert Adam who completed the North front (above) much as Brettingham designed it, but with a more dramatic portico.

Sir Nathaniel Curzon, later 1st Baron Scarsdale, having refused a prospective design by James Gibbs, one of the leading architects of the day, commissioned Brettingham in 1759 to design a great country house to equal Holkham Hall. (Lord Leicester, Holkham's owner and Brettingham's employer was a particular hero of Curzon). Mark Girouard in his Life in the English Country House argues that Curzon also wished to rival the nearby Duke of Devonshire's Chatsworth House and create another "Whig Power House"; however, as the Chatsworth estate was huge by comparison to Kedleston, and the Duke of Devonshire's influence, wealth, and title were far superior to that of Curzon, this seems unlikely. This commission might have been the ultimate accolade Brettingham was seeking, to recreate Holkham but this time with full credit. Kedleston Hall was designed by Brettingham on a plan by Andrea Palladio for the unbuilt Villa Mocenigo. The design by Brettingham, similar to that of Holkham Hall, was for a massive principal central block flanked by four secondary wings, each a miniature country house, themselves linked by quadrant corridors. From the outset of the project, Curzon seems to have presented Brettingham with rivals. While Brettingham was still in 1759 supervising the construction of the initial phase, the north-east family block, Curzon employed the architect James Paine, the most notable architect of the day, to supervise the kitchen block and quadrants. Paine also went on to supervise the construction of Brettingham's great north front. However, this was a critical moment for architecture in England. Palladianism was being challenged by a new fashion for neoclassical designs, one exponent of which was Robert Adam. Curzon had met Adam as early as 1758, and been impressed by the young architect, newly returned from Rome, and he employed Adam to design some garden pavilions for the new Kedleston. So impressed was Curzon by Adam's work that by April 1760 he had put Adam in sole charge of the design of the new mansion, replacing both Brettingham and Paine. Adam completed the north facade of the mansion much as Brettingham had designed it, only altering Brettingham's intended octagonal portico to a more dramatic six columned portico. The basic layout of the house remained loyal to Brettingham's original plan, although only two of the proposed four secondary wings were executed.

Brettingham's self-confidence may have been restored when, in the 1760s, he was approached by his most illustrious patron, the Duke of York (brother of King George III), to design one of the greatest mansions in Pall Mall, namely York House. The rectangular mansion that Brettingham designed was built in the Palladian style on two principal floors, with the state rooms as at Norfolk House arranged in a circuit around the central staircase hall. The house was a mere pastiche of Norfolk House, but for Brettingham it had the kudos of a royal occupant.

Conclusion

Its royal occupant may very well have made York House the pinnacle of Brettingham's career. Built during the 1760s, it was one of his last grand houses. Brettingham died in 1769, and was spared the humiliation of witnessing Robert Adam's remodelling of the house in 1780. Throughout his long career, Brettingham did much to popularise the Palladian movement. His client list included a Royal Duke and at least twenty-one assorted peers and peeresses. He is not a household name today largely because his provincial work was heavily influenced by Kent and Burlington, and unlike his contemporary Giacomo Leoni he did not develop, or was not given the opportunity to develop, a strong personal stamp to his work on country houses. Ultimately he and many of his contemporary architects were eclipsed by the designs of Robert Adam. Following the debacle at Kedleston Hall, Adam went on to replace the unfortunate James Paine as architect at Nostell Priory, Alnwick Castle, and Syon House. In spite of this Adam and Paine remained great friends, while Brettingham's relationships with his fellow architects is unrecorded.

Brettingham's principal contribution to architecture is perhaps the design of the grand town house, unremarkable for its exterior but with a circulating plan for reception rooms suitable for entertaining within on a forgotten scale of lavishness. Many of these anachronistic palaces are now long demolished or have been transformed to other uses and are denied to public view. Hence what little remains in London of his unique work is unknown to the general public. Of Brettingham's existing work, it is the buildings he remodelled which have survived, and for this reason today Brettingham tends to be thought of as an "improver" rather than an architect of country houses.

That he enjoyed success in his own life time is beyond doubt Robert Adam calculated that when Brettingham sent his son, also Matthew, on the Grand Tour, he went with a sum of money in his pocket of around £15,000, an enormous amount at the time. However, part of this sum was probably used to acquire the statuary in Italy (documented as supplied by Matthew Brettingham the Younger) for the nearly completed Holkham Hall. Ironically that great monumental house, still standing, the design of which cannot truly be accredited to him, is today the building for which Brettingham is best remembered.

External links

  • [http:\\www.holkham.co.uk/ Holkham Hall]
  • [http:\\www.cressbrook.co.uk/features/kedleston/ Kedleston Hall]
  • UKPG Database


There is an explanation at Talk:Matthew Brettingham concerning contradictory claims concerning Brettingham in various internet sites and references.

References

  • Girouard, Mark (1978). Life in the English Country House. Yale University Press. ISBN 0300022735.
  • Jackson-Stops, Gervase (1990). The Country House in Perspective. Pavilion Books. ISBN 1851453830.
  • Howell, D (1964). "Matthew Brettingham and the County of Norfolk". Norfolk Archaeology 33, Part III.
  • Harling, Robert (1969). Historic Houses. Conde Nast Publications.
  • Nicolson, Nigel (1965). Great Houses of Britain. George Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd. ISBN 060001651X.
  • Kedleston Hall (1997). The National Trust.