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Grinling Gibbons

Grinling Gibbons (4 April 1648 – 3 August 1721) was an Anglo-Dutch sculptor and wood carver known for his work in England, including Windsor Castle, the Royal Hospital Chelsea and Hampton Court Palace, St Paul's Cathedral and other London churches, Petworth House and other country houses, Trinity College, Oxford, and Trinity College, Cambridge. Gibbons was born to English parents in Holland, where he was educated.[1]

Grinling Gibbons
Grinling Gibbons by Sir Godfrey Kneller
Born4 April 1648
Died3 August 1721(1721-08-03) (aged 73)
Resting placeSt Paul's, Covent Garden, London
Occupation(s)Famous Sculptor and Wood Carver
Known forWorks on St Paul's Cathedral

His father was a merchant. Gibbons was a member of the Drapers' Company of London; he is widely regarded as the finest wood carver working in England, and the only one whose name is widely known among the general public. Most of his work is in lime (Tilia) wood, especially decorative Baroque garlands made up of still-life elements at about life size, made to frame mirrors and decorate the walls of churches and palaces, but he also produced furniture and small relief plaques with figurative scenes. He also worked in stone, mostly for churches. By the time he was established he led a large workshop, and the extent to which his personal hand appears in later work varies.[citation needed]

Life Edit

 
Detail from Hampton Court Palace

Very little is known about his early life. The name Grinling is formed from sections of two family names.

He was born in Rotterdam, Netherlands, and it is sometimes thought that his father may have been the Englishman Samuel Gibbons, who worked under Inigo Jones, but even two of his closest acquaintances, the portrait painter Thomas Murray and the diarist John Evelyn, cannot agree on how he came to be introduced to King Charles II. He moved to Deptford, England, around 1667, and by 1693 had accepted commissions from the royal family and had been appointed as a master carver.[2] By 1680 he was already known as the "King's Carver", and carried out exquisite work for St Paul's Cathedral, Windsor Castle, and the Earl of Essex's house at Cassiobury. His carving was so fine that it was said a pot of carved flowers above his house in London would tremble from the motion of passing coaches.

 
Bookcase carvings for the Wren Library, Cambridge

The diarist Evelyn first discovered Gibbons' talent by chance in 1671. Evelyn, from whom Gibbons rented a cottage near Evelyn's home in Sayes Court, Deptford (today part of south-east London), wrote the following: "I saw the young man at his carving, by the light of a candle. I saw him to be engaged on a carved representation of Tintoretto's "Crucifixion", which he had in a frame of his own making." Later that same evening, Evelyn described what he had seen to Sir Christopher Wren. Wren and Evelyn then introduced him to King Charles II who gave him his first commission – still resting in the dining room of Windsor Castle.

Gibbons was a member of the Drapers' Company in London, being admitted by patrimony in 1672 and called to the livery in 1685. He was elected to the court and as a warden and then stood for election to be Master in 1718, 1719, and 1720, losing to an alderman each time.[3]

Horace Walpole later wrote about Gibbons: "There is no instance of a man before Gibbons who gave wood the loose and airy lightness of flowers, and chained together the various productions of the elements with the free disorder natural to each species."

Gibbons is buried at St Paul's, Covent Garden, London.

Work Edit

 
Detail from Carved Room, Petworth House

Gibbons was employed by Wren to work on St Paul's Cathedral and later was appointed as master carver to George I. He was also commissioned by King William III to create carvings, some of which adorn Kensington Palace today. An example of his work can be seen in the Presence Chamber above the fireplace, which was originally intended to frame a portrait of Queen Mary II after her death in 1694. Also in the Orangery at Kensington, you can see some his pieces. Many fine examples of his work can still be seen in the churches around London, particularly the choir stalls and organ case of St Paul's Cathedral. Some of the finest Gibbons carvings accessible to the general public are those on display at the National Trust's Petworth House in West Sussex. At Petworth the Carved Room is host to a fine and extensive display of intricate wooden carvings by Gibbons.

His work can be seen in the London churches of St Michael Paternoster Royal and St James, Piccadilly, where he carved the wood reredos and marble font. The Anglican dislike of painted altarpieces typically left a large space on the east wall that needed filling, which often gave Grinling's garlands a very prominent position, as here.

 
Monument for Admiral Shovell in Westminster Abbey

In 1682 King Charles II commissioned Gibbons to carve a panel as a diplomatic gift for his political ally Cosimo III, Grand Duke of Tuscany. The Cosimo Panel is an allegory of art triumphing over hatred and turmoil and includes a medallion with a low relief of Pietro da Cortona, Cosimo's favourite painter. The panel is housed in the Pitti Palace in Florence. It was recently displayed in the United Kingdom in the Grinling Gibbons and the Art of Carving exhibition held at the V&A from 22 October 1998 until 24 January 1999.[4]

In 1685, the new king James II asked Gibbons to carve a panel for another Italian ally, the Duke of Modena Francesco II, brother to his second wife Mary of Modena. The Modena Panel is a memento mori for Charles II who died earlier that year and includes a funeral dirge from the play The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses by dramatist James Shirley: "There is no armour against fate; Death lays its icy hand on kings: Sceptre and crown must tumble down". It also features a medallion self-portrait of Gibbons. The panel is displayed in the Estense Gallery in Modena.[5]

St Peter and St Paul church in Exton, Rutland, has a fine marble tomb by Gibbons, dating from 1685, showing Viscount Campden with his fourth wife, Elizabeth Bertie, and carvings of his 19 children.[6]

 
Stoning of St Stephen, c. 1680, in the Victoria and Albert Museum

Many experienced Flemish sculptors such as Arnold Quellin (the son of Artus Quellinus II), John Nost, Anthony Verhuke, Laurens van der Meulen and Peter van Dievoet also worked in Gibbon's London workshop as "servants", i.e. collaborators. As these Flemish artists were not trainees they were never entered in the Draper's records. In a document dated 1679 van der Meulen, Quellin and Verhuke are referred to as servants of Gibbons. Many of them left London and returned to their home country after the revolution of 1688.[7]

In the Gibbons workshop these Flemish artists worked on various commissions but the contributions of particular artists active in the workshop are not always identifiable.[8] Laurens van der Meulen and Peter van Dievoet are known to have collaborated on the creation of the statue of King James II during their stay in the workshop of Gibbons.[9]

St Michael and All Angels Church, Badminton, has a monument by Gibbons to Henry Somerset, 1st Duke of Beaufort (1629–1700). He was buried alongside his ancestors in the Beaufort Chapel in St George's Chapel, Windsor,[10][11] but the monument was moved to Badminton in 1878.[12] The monument by Gibbons is now on the north side of the chancel at St Michael and All Angels Church, Badminton, and consists of an effigy of the Duke in Garter robes, reclining on a sarcophagus and a plinth with relief of St George and the Dragon. There are twin Corinthian columns with embossed shafts, acanthus frieze, cornice with flaming urns, and the Duke's arms and supporters. At the top, 25 ft from the ground, is a tasseled cushion supporting a coronet; on the plinth are full-length female figures of Justice and Truth. Above the Duke's effigy, parted curtains show the heavenly host with palms and crowns. The Latin inscription displays the names of his family and the many offices he held.[13]

Gibbons made the monument for Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell, who was killed in a disastrous shipwreck in 1707. Shovell's large marble monument can be seen in the south choir aisle of Westminster Abbey.[14]

Legacy Edit

Gibbons' association with Deptford is commemorated locally: Grinling Gibbons Primary School is in Clyde Street, near the site of Sayes Court in Deptford. Parts of New Cross and Deptford were in the "Grinling Gibbons" council ward from 1978 to 1998.[15]

List of Works Edit

Bibliography Edit

  • The Carved Cartoon: A Picture of the Past, Austin Clare 1873
  • The Work of Grinling Gibbons, Geoffrey Beard, John Murray 1989 ISBN 0-7195-4728-8
  • Grinling Gibbons and the Art of Carving, David Esterly, V&A Publications 2000 ISBN 1-85177-256-1
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSeccombe, Thomas (1898). "Somerset, Henry". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 53. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 242–245.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ V&A exhibition information, accessed 18 January 2013
  2. ^ "Grinling Gibbon", Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 30 September 2009.
  3. ^ "GIBBONS, Grinling 18383".
  4. ^ Ashley-Smith, Jonathan (October 1998). "The Cosimo Panel" (PDF). V&A Conservation Journal (29): 4–6. ISSN 0967-2273. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  5. ^ Easton, Bob. "Grinling Gibbons – Wait, There's More – at Modena". Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  6. ^ "TOMB OF VISCOUNT CAMPDEN AT EXTON CHURCH". World Monuments Fund.
  7. ^ David Esterly, Grinling Gibbons and the Art of Carving, Harry N. Abrams, 30 April 2013, pp. 45, 176, 209, 219-224.
  8. ^ "Gibbons, Grinling", in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 22, pp. 29–30 : "The attribution of these works is complicated by the presence of the highly trained Flemish sculptors whom Gibbons had gathered into his workshop by the end of the 1670s. These included Arnold Quellin (the nephew of Artus Quellinus I), John Nost, and Anthony Verhuke, joined in the next decade by, among others, Laurens Vander Meulen and Pierre Van Dievoet. Their experience and skill as makers of statues may have exceeded his own".
  9. ^ Horace Walpole, Anecdotes of painting in England: with some account of the principal artists; and incidental notes on other arts; collected by the late Mr. George Vertue; and now digested and published from his original MSS. by Mr. Horace Walpole, London, 1765, vol. III, p. 91 : "Gibbons had several disciples and workmen; [...]. Dievot of Brussels, and Laurens of Mechlin were principal journeymen — Vertue says they modelled and cast the statue I have mentioned in the privy-garden". According to David Green, in Grinling Gibbons, his work as carver and statuary (London, 1964), one Smooke said to Vertue that this statue "was modelled and made by Laurence and Devoot (sic)"; George Vertue, Note Books, ed. Walpole Society, Oxford, 1930–1947, vol. I, p. 82 : "Lawrence. Dyvoet. statuarys", and ibidem IV, 50: "Laurens a statuary of Mechlin ... Dievot a statuary of Brussels both these artists were in England and assisted Mr. Gibbons in statuary works in K. Charles 2d. and K. James 2d. time, they left England in the troubles of the Revolution and retird to their own country".
  10. ^ St George's Chapel, Windsor: The Beaufort Chantry 24 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine, 19 July 2013
  11. ^ For the inscription see Ashmole's Berkshire, iii. 163 (Seccombe 1898, p. 245)
  12. ^ Seccombe 1898, p. 245.
  13. ^ [http://www.badmintonchurch.org.uk/churches/great-badminton/ St Michael and All Angels, Great Badminton webpage, 19 July 2013.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 October 2009. Retrieved 29 January 2010.
  15. ^ London Borough of Lewisham

External links Edit

grinling, gibbons, april, 1648, august, 1721, anglo, dutch, sculptor, wood, carver, known, work, england, including, windsor, castle, royal, hospital, chelsea, hampton, court, palace, paul, cathedral, other, london, churches, petworth, house, other, country, h. Grinling Gibbons 4 April 1648 3 August 1721 was an Anglo Dutch sculptor and wood carver known for his work in England including Windsor Castle the Royal Hospital Chelsea and Hampton Court Palace St Paul s Cathedral and other London churches Petworth House and other country houses Trinity College Oxford and Trinity College Cambridge Gibbons was born to English parents in Holland where he was educated 1 Grinling GibbonsGrinling Gibbons by Sir Godfrey KnellerBorn4 April 1648Rotterdam NetherlandsDied3 August 1721 1721 08 03 aged 73 Resting placeSt Paul s Covent Garden LondonOccupation s Famous Sculptor and Wood CarverKnown forWorks on St Paul s CathedralHis father was a merchant Gibbons was a member of the Drapers Company of London he is widely regarded as the finest wood carver working in England and the only one whose name is widely known among the general public Most of his work is in lime Tilia wood especially decorative Baroque garlands made up of still life elements at about life size made to frame mirrors and decorate the walls of churches and palaces but he also produced furniture and small relief plaques with figurative scenes He also worked in stone mostly for churches By the time he was established he led a large workshop and the extent to which his personal hand appears in later work varies citation needed Contents 1 Life 2 Work 3 Legacy 4 List of Works 5 Bibliography 6 Notes 7 External linksLife EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Grinling Gibbons news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Detail from Hampton Court PalaceVery little is known about his early life The name Grinling is formed from sections of two family names He was born in Rotterdam Netherlands and it is sometimes thought that his father may have been the Englishman Samuel Gibbons who worked under Inigo Jones but even two of his closest acquaintances the portrait painter Thomas Murray and the diarist John Evelyn cannot agree on how he came to be introduced to King Charles II He moved to Deptford England around 1667 and by 1693 had accepted commissions from the royal family and had been appointed as a master carver 2 By 1680 he was already known as the King s Carver and carried out exquisite work for St Paul s Cathedral Windsor Castle and the Earl of Essex s house at Cassiobury His carving was so fine that it was said a pot of carved flowers above his house in London would tremble from the motion of passing coaches nbsp Bookcase carvings for the Wren Library CambridgeThe diarist Evelyn first discovered Gibbons talent by chance in 1671 Evelyn from whom Gibbons rented a cottage near Evelyn s home in Sayes Court Deptford today part of south east London wrote the following I saw the young man at his carving by the light of a candle I saw him to be engaged on a carved representation of Tintoretto s Crucifixion which he had in a frame of his own making Later that same evening Evelyn described what he had seen to Sir Christopher Wren Wren and Evelyn then introduced him to King Charles II who gave him his first commission still resting in the dining room of Windsor Castle Gibbons was a member of the Drapers Company in London being admitted by patrimony in 1672 and called to the livery in 1685 He was elected to the court and as a warden and then stood for election to be Master in 1718 1719 and 1720 losing to an alderman each time 3 Horace Walpole later wrote about Gibbons There is no instance of a man before Gibbons who gave wood the loose and airy lightness of flowers and chained together the various productions of the elements with the free disorder natural to each species Gibbons is buried at St Paul s Covent Garden London Work Edit nbsp Detail from Carved Room Petworth HouseGibbons was employed by Wren to work on St Paul s Cathedral and later was appointed as master carver to George I He was also commissioned by King William III to create carvings some of which adorn Kensington Palace today An example of his work can be seen in the Presence Chamber above the fireplace which was originally intended to frame a portrait of Queen Mary II after her death in 1694 Also in the Orangery at Kensington you can see some his pieces Many fine examples of his work can still be seen in the churches around London particularly the choir stalls and organ case of St Paul s Cathedral Some of the finest Gibbons carvings accessible to the general public are those on display at the National Trust s Petworth House in West Sussex At Petworth the Carved Room is host to a fine and extensive display of intricate wooden carvings by Gibbons His work can be seen in the London churches of St Michael Paternoster Royal and St James Piccadilly where he carved the wood reredos and marble font The Anglican dislike of painted altarpieces typically left a large space on the east wall that needed filling which often gave Grinling s garlands a very prominent position as here nbsp Monument for Admiral Shovell in Westminster AbbeyIn 1682 King Charles II commissioned Gibbons to carve a panel as a diplomatic gift for his political ally Cosimo III Grand Duke of Tuscany The Cosimo Panel is an allegory of art triumphing over hatred and turmoil and includes a medallion with a low relief of Pietro da Cortona Cosimo s favourite painter The panel is housed in the Pitti Palace in Florence It was recently displayed in the United Kingdom in the Grinling Gibbons and the Art of Carving exhibition held at the V amp A from 22 October 1998 until 24 January 1999 4 In 1685 the new king James II asked Gibbons to carve a panel for another Italian ally the Duke of Modena Francesco II brother to his second wife Mary of Modena The Modena Panel is a memento mori for Charles II who died earlier that year and includes a funeral dirge from the play The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses by dramatist James Shirley There is no armour against fate Death lays its icy hand on kings Sceptre and crown must tumble down It also features a medallion self portrait of Gibbons The panel is displayed in the Estense Gallery in Modena 5 St Peter and St Paul church in Exton Rutland has a fine marble tomb by Gibbons dating from 1685 showing Viscount Campden with his fourth wife Elizabeth Bertie and carvings of his 19 children 6 nbsp Stoning of St Stephen c 1680 in the Victoria and Albert MuseumMany experienced Flemish sculptors such as Arnold Quellin the son of Artus Quellinus II John Nost Anthony Verhuke Laurens van der Meulen and Peter van Dievoet also worked in Gibbon s London workshop as servants i e collaborators As these Flemish artists were not trainees they were never entered in the Draper s records In a document dated 1679 van der Meulen Quellin and Verhuke are referred to as servants of Gibbons Many of them left London and returned to their home country after the revolution of 1688 7 In the Gibbons workshop these Flemish artists worked on various commissions but the contributions of particular artists active in the workshop are not always identifiable 8 Laurens van der Meulen and Peter van Dievoet are known to have collaborated on the creation of the statue of King James II during their stay in the workshop of Gibbons 9 St Michael and All Angels Church Badminton has a monument by Gibbons to Henry Somerset 1st Duke of Beaufort 1629 1700 He was buried alongside his ancestors in the Beaufort Chapel in St George s Chapel Windsor 10 11 but the monument was moved to Badminton in 1878 12 The monument by Gibbons is now on the north side of the chancel at St Michael and All Angels Church Badminton and consists of an effigy of the Duke in Garter robes reclining on a sarcophagus and a plinth with relief of St George and the Dragon There are twin Corinthian columns with embossed shafts acanthus frieze cornice with flaming urns and the Duke s arms and supporters At the top 25 ft from the ground is a tasseled cushion supporting a coronet on the plinth are full length female figures of Justice and Truth Above the Duke s effigy parted curtains show the heavenly host with palms and crowns The Latin inscription displays the names of his family and the many offices he held 13 Gibbons made the monument for Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell who was killed in a disastrous shipwreck in 1707 Shovell s large marble monument can be seen in the south choir aisle of Westminster Abbey 14 Legacy EditGibbons association with Deptford is commemorated locally Grinling Gibbons Primary School is in Clyde Street near the site of Sayes Court in Deptford Parts of New Cross and Deptford were in the Grinling Gibbons council ward from 1978 to 1998 15 List of Works EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items December 2022 Memorial to William Windham St Margaret s Church Felbrigg Norfolk Statue of Charles II Royal Hospital ChelseaBibliography EditThe Carved Cartoon A Picture of the Past Austin Clare 1873 The Work of Grinling Gibbons Geoffrey Beard John Murray 1989 ISBN 0 7195 4728 8 Grinling Gibbons and the Art of Carving David Esterly V amp A Publications 2000 ISBN 1 85177 256 1Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Seccombe Thomas 1898 Somerset Henry In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 53 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 242 245 Notes Edit V amp A exhibition information accessed 18 January 2013 Grinling Gibbon Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 30 September 2009 GIBBONS Grinling 18383 Ashley Smith Jonathan October 1998 The Cosimo Panel PDF V amp A Conservation Journal 29 4 6 ISSN 0967 2273 Retrieved 8 September 2017 Easton Bob Grinling Gibbons Wait There s More at Modena Retrieved 8 September 2017 TOMB OF VISCOUNT CAMPDEN AT EXTON CHURCH World Monuments Fund David Esterly Grinling Gibbons and the Art of Carving Harry N Abrams 30 April 2013 pp 45 176 209 219 224 Gibbons Grinling in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography vol 22 pp 29 30 The attribution of these works is complicated by the presence of the highly trained Flemish sculptors whom Gibbons had gathered into his workshop by the end of the 1670s These included Arnold Quellin the nephew of Artus Quellinus I John Nost and Anthony Verhuke joined in the next decade by among others Laurens Vander Meulen and Pierre Van Dievoet Their experience and skill as makers of statues may have exceeded his own Horace Walpole Anecdotes of painting in England with some account of the principal artists and incidental notes on other arts collected by the late Mr George Vertue and now digested and published from his original MSS by Mr Horace Walpole London 1765 vol III p 91 Gibbons had several disciples and workmen Dievot of Brussels and Laurens of Mechlin were principal journeymen Vertue says they modelled and cast the statue I have mentioned in the privy garden According to David Green in Grinling Gibbons his work as carver and statuary London 1964 one Smooke said to Vertue that this statue was modelled and made by Laurence and Devoot sic George Vertue Note Books ed Walpole Society Oxford 1930 1947 vol I p 82 Lawrence Dyvoet statuarys and ibidem IV 50 Laurens a statuary of Mechlin Dievot a statuary of Brussels both these artists were in England and assisted Mr Gibbons in statuary works in K Charles 2d and K James 2d time they left England in the troubles of the Revolution and retird to their own country St George s Chapel Windsor The Beaufort Chantry Archived 24 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine 19 July 2013 For the inscription see Ashmole s Berkshire iii 163 Seccombe 1898 p 245 Seccombe 1898 p 245 http www badmintonchurch org uk churches great badminton St Michael and All Angels Great Badminton webpage 19 July 2013 Sir Clowdisley Shovell s tomb and memorial in Westminster Abbey Archived from the original on 16 October 2009 Retrieved 29 January 2010 London Borough of LewishamExternal links Edit nbsp Media related to Grinling Gibbons at Wikimedia Commons Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Gibbons Grinling Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grinling Gibbons amp oldid 1180111809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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