Our Patch Summer 2017 Hammersmith & Shepherds Bush | Page 17

Our Patch summer 2017 LOOKING BACK Lady Burlington’s portrait by William Aikman Chiswick house T he first lady of Chiswick House, Lady Burlington, keeps a watchful eye from the wall of her bedchamber. Born in 1699, Dorothy Savile married Richard Boyle, Earl of Burlington, in 1721. The union was to inspire them both. The designer William Kent and the poet Alexander Pope were delighted with the match. Pope wrote to Lord Burlington: “I hope she paints, I hope you build,” while Kent expressed the wish that “architecture will flourish”. Neither was disappointed. Lord Burlington is famous as the “architect Earl” of Chiswick House, who inspired his generation. Yet his wife’s story is less frequently told. Together, they were patrons of George Frideric Handel (who is celebrated with concerts c h i sw i c k in the House on 14 and 15 June this year) and the actor David Garrick. A gifted portrait artist and talented caricaturist, Lady Burlington was, for a decade, one of Queen Caroline’s ladies of the bedchamber; this inspired many of her sketches. The Burlingtons' marriage is celebrated in their interlinked initials in the Blue Velvet Room’s cornicing and in a famously informal, loving portrait which now hangs in the Red Velvet Room. Lady Burlington supported her husband’s design work by commissioning Kent’s ceiling painting in her Summer Parlour, which includes owl motifs from the Savile family crest. ‘Kentino’, as he was nicknamed, also designed the hangings for her four- poster bed. She advised against use of velvet to cover cushions, as it left the impression of sitters' bottoms! “In any velvet that is much used, there will be always the print of people’s sitting,” she wrote. “Lord Burlington changed the face of British and American architecture, setting the trend for neo-Palladian design that came to define the Georgian period,” said Chiswick House & Gardens Trust director Clare O’Brien. “Lady Burlington had a huge influence on Chiswick House, its design and decoration. Today we are privileged to be able to enjoy the fruits of both their labours in this most exquisite of England’s country estates.” Lady Burlington died soon after her 59th birthday. Savile Row, home of London tailoring, was named after her. Visitors can see her painting of her daughter in the Red Closet at Chiswick House.