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The original house at Kenwood was probably built in the early 17th century. It was transformed by Robert Adam in the 1760s and 1770s into a fine neoclassical villa for the 1st Earl of Mansfield - the greatest judge of his day. In 1925 it was bought by a member of the Guiness family to house his art collection. It was taken over by English Heritage in 1986. In 2012 an extensive refurbishment costing nearly £6 million was started -the house re-opened to the public at the end of 2013.
www.english-heritage.org.uk/daysout/properties/kenwood/hi...
Probably C17th, instead of standing proud, this plasterwork is inverted almost like the reverse of the mold. National Trust property taken in Yorkshire in 2014
Ceiling detail in the Elizabethan House museum. It's an overused adjective but the colour and texture really were creamy.
This is the ornate ceiling of the Octagon Room at Orleans House. The reason I have not been posting very riveting images and have taken some time to post these at all, is that is that I have been working hard on the organisation and hanging of an exhibition for artsrichmond with photographs submitted from people across the Borough.
I spent the morning putting up the display boards and hanging the prints prior to the Private View later in the day which went really well.
You can really see the difference between the marble panels at the bottom and the plasterwork above.
Chastleton House, Chastleton near Moreton-in-Marsh, Oxfordshire
Great Chamber
A frieze incorporates a total of 24 painted roundels representing 12 Old Testament prophets and their pagan female counterparts, the 12 sibyls of antiquity (who also had the gift of prophecy).
left to right:
The Libyan Sibyl holding an Olive or Myrtle Branch
The European Sibyl
Moses with the tablets of law
The Prophet Isaiah
King David with Harp
1639 plasterwork over the chancel arch showing the Ascension done when Christopher Wrens father was vicar
Hardwick Hall, N T, Derbyshire
Hardwick Old Hall
Mr William Cavendish's Chamber
Oak panelled and benefitting from the heat from the bread ovens and pastry below. Plaster overmantel shows Naphtali (founder of one of the tribes of israel) astride a stag (Cavendish heraldic symbol).