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Croome Court Tapestry Room Met Museum

The Cock & Lion: French Design in British Historic Houses

Lecture
Online
May 28, 2024 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. ET
$15
Curt DiCamillo
10% Member Discount

Enemies for centuries, the British and French frequently found common ground on art—French art, that is! Join Curator of Special Collections Curt DiCamillo for a brilliantly illustrated exposé of French design and decorative arts within British townhouses, country estates, and palaces.

Even during the most ferocious wars against France, the British were buying French art and furniture for their homes. During the French Revolution the British aristocracy, shocked at the horror of the fate of the French nobility, acquired their possessions for sentimental, as well as aesthetic and opportunistic, reasons.

There was no more enthusiastic member of the British Francophile Club than the Prince Regent, later King George IV. In the early 19th century, in the middle of the Napoleonic Wars, when the security of Europe hung by a thread, George was buying immense quantities of Sèvres and French furniture, paintings, and decorative arts for his homes: Carlton House, Windsor Castle, and Buckingham Palace. These royal residences, the creations of George IV, were filled with enormous amounts of French art. Windsor, in particular (within its castle shell), is a glittering French palace with a collection of Gallic art that would be the envy of any king of France. But this love of all things French wasn’t confined to the king. Members of the aristocracy, from the 1st Duke of Montagu, four times British ambassador to the Court of Louis XIV, to the 3rd Duke of Richmond at Goodwood House, to the 10th Duke of Hamilton at Hamilton Palace, voraciously collected all things French.

It wasn’t just the old aristocracy that caught this French zeal, however; the new rich, like the English Rothschilds, created country houses that were a paean to French art and design. This passion spread to the capital, where many of the greatest London townhouses, filled with breathtaking collections of French art, were modeled on the sumptuous hôtels particuliers of Paris.

Curt DiCamillo
Decorative Arts
Historic Houses
England
Curt DiCamillo, who joined American Ancestors/NEHGS in February of 2016 as the organization’s first Curator of Special Collections, is an internationally recognized authority on British historic houses and the decorative arts.