A brief introduction to designed landscapes Deborah Evans, CMLI
A brief introduction to designed landscapes
Deborah Evans, CMLI
The medieval garden: hortus conclusus
Winchester Cathedral
English Renaissance – Tudor/Stuart gardens
Hatfield House Lyveden New Bield
Kenilworth Castle Kirby Hall
English Baroque - French and Dutch influenced gardens of the late 17th and early 18th centuries
Hampton Court Inkpen House
Transitional landscapes: Bridgeman at Kensington Palace (left) and Claremont (right)
‘Capability’ Brown (1716 – 1783)and the English Landscape Movement
Humphry Repton
1752 - 1818
Victorian revivalism
Shrubland Hall Thoresby Hall
Montacute House
The Victorian Cemetery Movement… …then and now
Arnos Vale Cemetery
Kensal Green Cemetery
The public parks movement, 1840 - 1920
Clockwise from above: Royal Victoria Park, Bath, Dorchester Borough Gardens, Devonport Park, Princess Gardens, Torquay
20th century eclecticism
Commonwealth Institute, London; American Cemetery, Cambridge; Sutton Place, Surrey: Barnsley House, Gloucestershire; ‘Orpheus’, Boughton House,
Northamptonshire; Ashton Wold, Northamptonshire