The Genius of Place - or the Man
who would improve on Nature
Linda Buckley-Archer
I’m always drawn to his kind, quizzical eyes whenever
I visit the vine at Hampton Court - which I do, absurdly often. I don’t, however, know much at all about
the man. But what I do like – very
much – is his eye (to borrow Pope's phrase) for the genius of place.
‘Now
there’, said [‘Capability’ Brown], pointing his finger, ‘I make a comma, and
there’, pointing to another spot, ‘where a more decided turn is proper, I make
a colon; at another part, where an interruption is desirable to break the view,
a parenthesis; now a full stop, and then I begin another subject.’
Lancelot Brown speaking about the grammar of
design in 1782.
Lancelot 'Capability' Brown |
The
wheel has turned full circle. From
being dragged around endless National Trust properties as a young child, I gradually
progressed from protesting, to acquiescing and, ultimately, to being the one doing the dragging. Our school holidays were punctuated
with trips that involved crunching up the long, dusty drives of the stately
homes of England in our old maroon Ford Consul. In its glove compartment, the well-thumbed book of National
Trust properties was always to hand.
All those picnics in grassy car parks, the bracing walks through the surrounding
countryside, the slower walks (oh, so slow) through walled kitchen gardens and
herbaceous borders. And all the
while my horticulturally-minded parents would admire varieties and (oh, the shame
of it) would occasionally secrete a choice leaf cutting into pocket or handbag.
If we were lucky, there was the
reward of a tub of ice cream at the end of it. It instilled in us children a certain idea of Englishness; I
suppose it brought to life for me certain aspects of England’s history.
Something
slowly accreted in my impressionable young brain during all those long summer
afternoons. What it was, I think,
was a kind of burgeoning, unthinking love of the English landscape. It was not the architectural jewel
rescued by the National Trust that affected me, but rather the land into which
it had been set. What I did not
appreciate until much, much later, was that what I took to be England’s lovely countryside
was often, in point of fact, Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown’s idealised vision of
it. Unlike the geometric designs
typified by Le Notre’s plan for Versailles a century earlier, Brown turned his
back on formality, straight lines and symmetry, and took his inspiration, instead, from Nature. A good percentage of the beautiful ‘views’ I grew up admiring
were actually examples of his beautiful landscaping.
Writing
in the 40s, Brenda Colvin commented that “it was in the eighteenth century, in
England, that garden and landscape first came together and were seen to be in
relationship. The idea of
designing gardens as part of the wider landscape, and the wider landscape as a
garden, was new, and was not fully grasped even in the eighteenth
century.” It was this idea
that was embodied in Brown’s
designs. For him the garden was
inseparable from the landscape in which it was situated. Anything that smacked of artificiality Lancelot Brown
abhorred: formal planting,
hedgerows, fences were all torn out. Lawns were laid right up to the house to avoid the
division between garden and landscape. Earth was shifted (64,000 tons of it at
Petworth) to generate the perfect curve or sweep of land. Streams were damned to
form serpentine lakes and breathtaking cascades (he famously flooded Vanbrugh’s
bridge at Blenheim Palace in so doing). Majestic single specimens or clumps of trees were planted to
highlight and accent nature’s bounty.
For one of his designs Brown planted over 100,000 trees to create the
desired effect. Hugely influential
and widely copied, Brown’s designs still draw admirers from all over the
world.
Born
in Northumberland in 1716, Brown served a long apprenticeship under William
Kent at Stowe. In a career that
spanned five decades (he died in 1783), Brown travelled the length and breadth of the land, and was
nothing if not prolific. In his long
career he worked on upwards of 170 of the great gardens of England: these included Hampton Court, Petworth, Blenheim, Burghley, Longleat,
Wycombe Abbey, Syon House, Temple Newsam, Harewood House. Compton
Verney, Claremont, Stourhead and Warwick Castle. Whether you realise it or not, you will probably have seen
his labours. He also planted the Great Vine at Hampton Court in around 1768, and you
can still buy the grapes in season (which are delicious and have a lovely bloom
to them). I understand that you
can even acquire plants propagated from it. Around thirty of the gardens he designed are open to
the public. In this year of the 2012
London Olympics, whose opening ceremony will be celebrating England’s green and
pleasant land, I would like to propose a toast to the inimitable Lancelot
‘Capability’ Brown, a man of whom it can be truly said that he transformed the
English landscape.
If anyone is interested in finding out
more about the man and his work, may I recommend Dorothy Stroud’s classic biography
Capability Brown, as well as the more
recent The Omnipotent Magician: Lancelot
‘Capability’ Brown by Jane Brown.
Linda Buckley-Archer’s Time Quake Trilogy is published by Simon
& Schuster in the UK and the US.
Lovely choice, Linda, & a beautiful post. I had never seen his portrait - what a wonderful expression in those eyes!
ReplyDeleteAn interesting man - and such a curious face! I too love those wide NT English landscapes, but when visiting I can't quite forget how existing villages, hamlets and homes were often destroyed or moved elsewhere so that the visual perfection of this style - and other great house Edens - could be achieved. But certainly Brown is a man to admire.
ReplyDeleteStunning post, Linda.I'm one of the ignoramuses who've seen his work dozens of times without even realizing, and now will have to look again.
ReplyDeleteAnd how peculiarly English it all is! Studying 17th century France I've really struggled with the curtailment of nature, but this is both control and liberation in one movement.
Enchanting portrait, and a lovely post. I see we can look forward to a great anniversary month.
ReplyDeleteThanks Harriet and Penny - the portrait is very characterful, isn't it? You can just imagine him eying up an estate to see if it had 'capabilities' and calculating how many houses were going to be a blot on his landscape... Somehow, in an age of Twitter and public enquiries, I think Lancelot Brown's imagination would have been rather more constrained. Nevertheless I love his quintessentially English landscapes - he's had a big influence on me one way and another. I think we should be very proud of him.
ReplyDeleteMarvellous! He's one of my heroes too and I love the National Trust. We don't drive or own a car but if we did, I'd join NT at once. As it is, I frequent the shops and visit as many NT places as I can courtesy of friends and things like Friends of the Fitzwilliam etc. Fabulous-looking chap.
ReplyDeleteI see his work (or at least his influence) at once when I see a great old house with sweeping grounds and views. He really did transform our landscapes. Great choice.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Laurie, for your comment. Louise, I love what you say about control and liberation - that's exactly what it is. Adele and Marie-Louise, I knew I wouldn't be the only History Girl to be fond of Lancelot Brown. As this is going to have to be my penultimate post, I was pleased to be able to squeeze him in.
ReplyDeleteWonderful face - he looks as if he'd have a tale or two to tell, and would tell them well!
ReplyDeleteNice article. You might be interesting in this development of a Lancelot Brown sculpted head from documentary sources, for the Brown Tercentary in 2016. If anyone knows of any less well known or less attributed works of Brown than may assist, please make contact!
ReplyDeletehttp://capabilitybrownsculpture.wordpress.com