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BIFMO-FHS ONLINE COURSE – JUNE 2025 The Evolution of the British Villa: architecture and interiors 1600-1900

Published by on 26 May 2025
BIFMO-FHS ONLINE COURSE – JUNE 2025
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june 25 FLYER
The Evolution of the British Villa: architecture and interiors 1600-1900.  Every Tuesday throughout  June starting at 5.30pm – 7.30pm (BST) - 12.30pm – 2.30pm (EST)

Join us every Tuesday in June on Zoom when experts will consider a variety of villas built in Britain between the early seventeenth century and the turn of the twentieth, paying particular regard to their architecture, interior spaces and furnishings. The course charts the villa’s development in Britain from its adoption as an entertainment space and smaller cousin of the country house through to its incarnation as a luxurious and beautifully designed modern dwelling. 

 

Session 1 - Tuesday 3 June - The Continental Influence: the villa arrives in Britain in the early 17th century
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Chiswick House Statue
Statue at the front of Chiswick House. Anthony Worsdell / Alamy Stock Photo

Paula HendersonA ‘house of delight’ for the Queen: Inigo Jones and the idea of the ‘villa’

Elizabeth DeansThe Thames Trianon: William Talman and the Authority of French Architecture

Jeremy Howard “The Palladian Paradigm”: Chiswick House, its sources and influence on Neo-Palladian architecture and interiors

 

Session 2 - Tuesday 10 June - Early Villas in London
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Gunnersbury House
Engraving of Gunnersbury House, c. 1750

Sebastian Edwards - The royal villa of Frederick, Prince of Wales, George III and Queen Charlotte at Kew

Susanna Avery-QuashBuilding, Collecting and Display: John Julius Angerstein’s Georgian suburban villa, 'Woodlands' at Blackheath, London

Diana Davis - A Villa Worthy of an Italian Prince": Gunnersbury Park and the Rothschilds, 1835-1925

 

Session 3 - Tuesday 17 June - The Gothic Villa
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Strawberry Hill
Strawberry Hill House

Megan Aldrich - Thomas Rickman, the Villa and the Gothic Revival

Mark Baker - Gwrych Castle, Wales

Cas Bradbeer, Rosalind White & Sara PopeFurnishing the Victorian Villa: Lady Waldegrave’s revival of Strawberry Hill

 

Session 4 - Tuesday 24 June - The Modern Suburban Villa
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'Windy_Hill'
Mackintosh's design for Windyhill, 1900

Annette Carruthers Modern Homes for Moderate Incomes

Tony PeartBroad Leys and Littleholme: The Furnishing of Two Voysey houses in the Lake District

Joseph SharplesCharles Rennie Mackintosh’s ‘Windyhill’: Making a Virtue of Simplicity

 

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june 25 FLYER

Tickets may be bought for individual sessions or for the entire course, but you will benefit from a discount if all 4 sessions are bought together. Don’t worry if you cannot attend the sessions live because they will be recorded and links to the recordings will be sent to ticketholders. These recordings will not be available to buy after the course has ended. FHS members and ECD members will benefit from a discount on all tickets. For further information and to purchase tickets please click here to travel straight to the relevant Eventbrite page. If you cannot visit the website or have any other questions, please email bifmo@furniturehistorysociety.org .

BANNER ABOVE: All details from the following from left to right:  Painting of Strawberry Hill by Johann Heinrich Müntz (c.1755-59). Public domain; light fitting at Windy Hill, Kilmacolm, designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh. Public domain; watercolour drawing by F.C. Witney taken from The Art and Craft of Home Making by Edward W. Gregory, published by Thomas Murby & Co. (1913); 'Woodland House, Kent', engraving by James Walker(1795). © The National Gallery, London; Tulip Stairs and lantern at the Queen's HouseGreenwich by Inigo Jones (1616-1635). Creative commons. Photo: Mcginnly.