The Idea of Villa Castagna
A garden is both a real place, and a cloud of possibilities. What you will find here will be both something real, and something that may or may not become real. For this reason you will find no map: Instead you will meet fragments, part real, part possible.
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Category Archives: Architecture
On Organic Geometry
In Luke Syson and Dora Thornton’s Objects of Virtue there is a nice comparative illustration of a carved ivory knife handle after Francesco Salviati (Fig. 1)[1] and a print by Cherubino Alberti of two designs of knife handles by Salviati … Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architectural paintings, Architecture, Art, Baroque architecture, Design, Rome, Uncategorized
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Tagged Francesco Salviati, Griffin, Renaissance art, sculpture
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Pavilions, Fabriques, and the Reverential Copy
[This paper discusses a category of building that is related to, and sometimes overlaps with, the pavilion: the fabrique. The fabrique is not to be confused with the folly, although both are found in parks and gardens and the terms … Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Art, Arts and Crafts Movement, Baroque architecture, Baroque Gardens, Daylesford, English Gardens, Fabriques, Garden History, Rome, Town and Village, Uncategorized, Villa Castagna, Villas, Wombat Hill Botanical Gardens
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Tagged Arts and Crafts, Australian Gardens, Bagatelle, Baroque Gardens, Bramante; pavilion, chateau de Groussay; Woerlitz, creative gardens, Daylesford, English Gardens, fabrique, Fabriques, folly, Garden History, Garden Sculpture, Wombat Hill Botanical Gardens
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Schloss Trautsmannsdorf Meditations 2: Jean-François de Bastide’s La Petite Maison and Architectural Seduction
Following my exploration of the somewhat unsatisfactory Garden for Lovers at Schloss Trautsmannsdorf (https://villacastagnadaylesford.wordpress.com/2018/06/23/schloss-trautmannsdorf-and-the-problematic-of-gardens-for-lovers) it may be worth turning to eighteenth-century France for a very different approach to the erotic garden. The key text is Jean-François de Bastide’s La Petite … Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Art, Baroque architecture, Baroque Gardens, Fabriques, Garden History, Uncategorized, Villas
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Tagged Baroque Gardens, Bastide, Fabriques, Pavillon de la Boissière, rococo gardens, seduction
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A Painting near Willem van Nieulandt II of the Colosseum and S. Croce in Gerusalemme
In the Museum at Montepulciano is a painting on panel with ruins, a church, and the Colosseum. It is catalogued as ‘Romanised Northern painter, Landscape with Roman ruins and figures. Mid-16th century. Oil on panel’ (Fig. 1).[1] It bears the … Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Art, Baroque architecture, Rome, Uncategorized
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Tagged Willem van Nieulandt II
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Schloss Trautmannsdorf Meditations I: the Problematic of Gardens for Lovers
The garden at Schloss Trautmannsdorf is a kind of Eden Project, a new garden created from 1995 and opened in 2001 (Fig. 1). The castle, which has had a sorry history, contains the provincial tourism museum, or Touriseum, which is … Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Art, Baroque Gardens, English Gardens, Fabriques, Garden History, Plants, Uncategorized
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Tagged Baroque Gardens, Chaumont, creative gardens, Fabriques, Garden History, Garden Sculpture, Trautsmandorff
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Onion Domes and the Spire of the Dresden Hofkirche (1738-51), with asides on the Frauenkirche
Onion domes are seen here as being extravagantly exotic. They are certainly un-English and un-Australian. While ogee curves are common enough here in neo-Elizabethan buildings and Victorian bandstands, I cannot think of an example of an ‘onion’ dome. But first … Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Art, Baroque architecture, Baroque Gardens, Design, Fabriques, Restoration and Conservation, Uncategorized
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Tagged Bolzano, Trento
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On Natural Timber Finishes
My experience with using natural timber finishes on the Montacute carport and other projects. Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Construction, Design, Montacute, Uncategorized
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Tagged natural timber finishes
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Silvertop Ash Cladding on Montacute
On cladding Montacute. How to handle silvertop ash shiplap cladding. Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Construction, Daylesford, Montacute, Uncategorized, Villa Castagna
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Tagged cladding, Montacute, silvertop ash
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Portmeirion 3. How Serious is Portmeirion?
The trauma of the First World War seems to have manifested itself in the ‘silly ass’ artistic culture of the 1920s. Novelists like Margery Allingham, and even Dorothy L. Sayers, created their detective heroes as upper class twits who took … Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Art, Arts and Crafts Movement, Baroque Gardens, Fabriques, Town and Village, Uncategorized
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Tagged Portmeirion
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The Monkey Puzzle Parterre at Biddulph Grange
At the National Trust’s Biddulph Grange garden in England they have a little terraced gardens in the section called ‘Italy’ which has four small monkey puzzle trees in a little box-edged parterre centred on a stone vase (Figs 1–3). This … Continue reading →
Posted in All Posts, Architecture, Arts and Crafts Movement, Baroque Gardens, Garden History, Montacute, Plants, Uncategorized, Villa Castagna, Wombat Hill Botanical Gardens
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Tagged Australian Gardens, Bolzano, Garden History, monkey puzzle trees, Tynesfield, Wombat Hill Botanical Gardens
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