Contrary to past opinions William Andrews Nesfield's garden layouts were not
solely designed to provide appropriate accompaniments to the Elizabethan and Jacobean
revival architecture of his brother-in-law Anthony Salvin (1799-1881). Nor were they
conceived chiefly to provide his wealthy patrons with a variation on the French
seventeenth-century parterre-de-broderie. Undoubtedly, this device helped to forge a
sympathetic bond between Nesfield and his patrons, for it had been a symbol of power and
status in seventeenth-century France when it was associated with the upper echelons of
French society. It therefore represented to the aristocracy and upper gentry of nineteenth-century
Britain, during the time Nesfield was engaged in landscape design, a symbol of
their continuing power and influence.
The above factors were a means to an end for Nesfield, and helped him to become
firmly established as a successful landscape designer. But the most crucial element to be
considered. when attempting to reach an understanding of Nesfield's garden design
philosophy, is his spacial awareness which demanded that both the strictly formal area in
the environs of the house and the more naturalistic landscape beyond be adapted and
integrated into a cohesive whole. He did this by assimilating the individual parts through
visual assessment, transferring his findings to his drawing board and then applying these
findings to the ground. As an experienced professional landscape painter, skilled in the arts
of observation and perspective, he was able to adapt the classical concept of the unity of all
the parts for his own use and then incorporate within the two divergent areas of his overall
designs the fundamental elements of variety, consistency, simplicity, breadth and repose.
Date of Award | 2007 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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WILLIAM ANDREWS NESFIELD [1794-1881] ARTIST AND LANDSCAPE GARDENER
Evans, S. R. (Author). 2007
Student thesis: PhD