Queen's House
Queen's House | |
Kent | |
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The Queen's House, viewed from the main gate | |
Type: | Palace |
Location | |
Grid reference: | TQ38717769 |
Location: | 51°28’52"N, 0°0’14"W |
Town: | Greenwich |
History | |
Built 1616-1635 | |
For: | Queen Anne, of Denmark by Inigo Jones |
Palace | |
Neo-classical | |
Information | |
Condition: | Converted to museum |
Owned by: | Royal Museums Greenwich |
Website: | rmg.co.uk/queens-house |
Queen's House is a former royal residence in Greenwich, built within Greenwich Park between 1616 and 1635 for Anne of Denmark, the queen of King James I. Its architect was Inigo Jones, for whom The Queen's House was a crucial early commission.
Today the building is both a Grade I listed building and a scheduled ancient monument, a status that includes the 115-foot axial vista to the River Thames. The house now forms part of the National Maritime Museum and is used to display parts of their substantial collection of maritime paintings and portraits. It was used as a VIP centre during the 2012 Olympic Games.
Contents
Features
This is one of the most important buildings in British architectural history, being the first consciously classical building to have been constructed in the country. It was Jones's first major commission after returning from his 1613–1615 grand tour[1] of Roman, Renaissance, and Palladian architecture in Italy.
Some earlier British buildings, such as Longleat and Burghley House, had made borrowings from the classical style, but these were restricted to small details not applied in a systematic way, or the building may be a mix of different styles.[2] Furthermore, the form of these buildings was not informed by an understanding of classical precedents. Queen's House would have appeared revolutionary to English eyes in its day. Jones is credited with the introduction of Palladianism with the construction of Queen's House, although it diverges from the mathematical constraints of Palladio, and it is likely that the immediate precedent for the H-shaped plan straddling a road is the Villa Medici at Poggio a Caiano by Giuliano da Sangallo.
The salon is a 40-foot cube.
The Tulip Stairs in the house are the first centrally unsupported helical stairs constructed in Britain. The stairs are supported by a cantilever from the walls with each tread resting on the one below.
Early history
The Queen's House was built in Greenwich as an adjunct to the Tudor palace here, the Palace of Greenwich, which before its redevelopment by King Henry VII (around 1500) was known as the Palace of Placentia. The Place of Greenwich was a rambling, mainly red-brick building in a more vernacular style and this would have presented a dramatic contrast of appearance to the newer, white-painted House. The Queen's House was not built as a palace, which functions a public building of state, but in the form of a private house, following an older tradition of private 'garden houses'. It was frequented only by the Queen's privileged inner circle.
Construction of the house began in 1616 but work on the house stopped in April 1618 when Anne became ill. She died the next year. Work restarted in 1629 when King Charles I gave the house to his queen, Henrietta Maria. The house was structurally complete by 1635.
The house's original use was short—no more than seven years—before the Civil War began in 1642 and swept away the court culture from which it sprang. Of its interiors, three ceilings and some wall decorations survive in part, but no interior remains in its original state. The Restoration in 1660 did not save the house. In 1662, masons removed a niche and term figures and a chimneypiece, and the process of emptying it continued.
Paintings commissioned by Charles I for the house from Orazio Gentileschi, but now elsewhere, include a ceiling Allegory of Peace and the Arts, now installed at Marlborough House, London,[3] a large Finding of Moses, now on loan from a private collection to the National Gallery, and a matching Joseph and Potiphar's Wife still in the Royal Collection.[4]
The Queen's House, though it was scarcely being used, provided the distant focal centre for Sir Christopher Wren's Greenwich Hospital, with a logic and grandeur that has seemed inevitable to architectural historians but in fact depended on the insistence by Queen Mary II that the vista to the water from the Queen's House not be impaired.[5]
Construction of the Greenwich Hospital
Although the house survived as an official building – being used for the lying-in-state of Commonwealth Generals-at-Sea Richard Dean (1653) and Robert Blake (1657) – the main palace was progressively demolished from the 1660s to 1690s and replaced by the Royal Hospital for Seamen,[6] built 1696-1751 to the master-plan of Sir Christopher Wren. This is now called the Old Royal Naval College, after its later use from 1873 to 1998. The position of the house, and Queen Mary II's order that it retain its view to the river (only gained on demolition of the older Palace), dictated Wren's Hospital design of two matching pairs of 'courts' separated by a grand 'visto' exactly the width of the house (115 ft). Wren's first plan, which was blocking the view to the Thames, became known to history as "Christopher Wren's faux pas". It may be likened to I.M. Pei's pyramid at the Louvre, which blocks its central view as well. The whole ensemble at Greenwich forms an impressive architectural vista that stretches from the Thames to Greenwich Park, and is one of the principal features that in 1997 led UNESCO to inscribe 'Maritime Greenwich' as a World Heritage Site.
19th-century additions
From 1806 the house itself was the centre of what, from 1892, became the Royal Hospital School for the sons of seamen. This necessitated new accommodation wings, and a flanking pair to east and west were added and connected to the house by colonnades from 1807 (designed by London Docks architect Daniel Asher Alexander), with further surviving extensions up to 1876. In 1933 the school moved to Holbrook, Suffolk. Its Greenwich buildings, including the house, were converted and restored to become the new National Maritime Museum, created by Act of Parliament in 1934 and opened in 1937.
The grounds immediately to the north of the house were reinstated in the late 1870s following construction of the cut-and-cover tunnel between Greenwich and Maze Hill stations. The tunnel comprised the continuation of the London and Greenwich Railway and opened in 1878.
Recent years
The house underwent a 14-month restoration beginning in 2015, and reopened on October 11, 2016.[7] One controversial feature was a new ceiling in the main hall created by artist Richard Wright, a Turner prize winner. The house had previously been restored between 1986 and 1999, with contemporary insertions that modernised the building. In some quarters, it provoked some debate: An editorial in The Burlington Magazine, November 1995, alluded to "the recent transformation of the Queen's House into a theme-park interior of fake furniture and fireplaces, tatty modern plaster casts and clip-on chandeliers".[8] It is now largely used to display the Museum's substantial collection of marine paintings and portraits of the 17th to 20th centuries, and for other public and private events. It is normally open to the public daily, free of charge, along with the other museum galleries and the 17th-century Royal Observatory, Greenwich, which is also part of the National Maritime Museum.
In 2012, the grounds behind the Queen's House were used to house a stadium for the equestrian events of the Olympic Games. The modern pentathlon was also staged in the grounds of Greenwich Park. The Queen's House itself was used as a VIP centre for the games. Work to prepare the Queen's House involved some internal re-modelling and work on the lead roof to prepare it for security and camera installations.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Queen's House) |
References
- ↑ The phrase 'Grand Tour' was unknown until approximately 1670, but in essence, Jones's tour of Germany, Italy and France, incorporated many of the elements of the later tour.
- ↑ Nikolaus Pevsner (1970). An outline of European architecture. Penguin Books. pp. 304–310. ISBN 978-0140201093. https://archive.org/details/outlineofeuropea00pevs/page/304.
- ↑ R. W. Bissell, Orazio Gentileschi and the Poetic Tradition in Caravaggiesque Painting[1981], cat. no. 70, pp 195–98.
- ↑ Christopher Lloyd (art historian)|Lloyd, Christopher, The Queen's Pictures, Royal Collectors through the centuries, p. 102, National Gallery Publications, 1991, ISBN 0-947645-89-6. This is usually at Hampton Court Palace.
- ↑ Bold, John: 'Greenwich: An Architectural History of the Royal Hospital for Seamen and the Queen's House' (Yale University Press, 2000)
- ↑ The Royal Hospital for Seamen is usually known as Greenwich Hospital.
- ↑ "The king of England gave his wife this house to forgive her for shooting his best hunting dog". Quartz. 8 October 2016. http://qz.com/800100/the-queen-of-england-built-herself-a-hunting-villa-that-only-got-used-for-four-years/.
- ↑ "Greenwich grotesquerie", The Burlington Magazine 137 No. 1112 (November 1995:719); the occasion was the Ministry of Defense and the Department of National Heritage's issuance of a glossy brochure through estate agents soliciting long-term leases for Wren's Old Royal Naval Hospital, Greenwich.
- History of the Queen's House: Royal Museums Greenwich
- 'Survey of London', Howard Colvin, ed. (London County Council)
- 'The History of The King's Works', Volume IV, 1485–1660, Part II, 9
Royal Museums Greenwich, in Kent |
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The Cutty Sark • National Maritime Museum • Queen's House • Royal Observatory, Greenwich |