On my way to check out the Serpentine Gallery, I took a pleasant leisurely stroll around Kensington Gardens in central London.
Here’s some photos from my perambulations:
The 150-year old ornamental Italian Gardens in Kensington Gardens.
The Garden Visit website has more details:
Prince Albert had the idea of making an Italian Garden, in 1861, at the north end of the Long Waterwhich becomes the Serpentine.The pavilion, originally a pump house, was designed by Sir Charles Barry (also the architect of the Houses of Parliament and Trafalgar Square).
The gardens were designed by James Pennethorne (who also designed Victoria Park) and the sculpture was by John Thomas (who also designed the Atlas Fountain at Castle Howard). Their work was good but it was the masterpiece one might have expected from an illustrious team. William Robinson was rude about the whole project.
He wrote that ‘The plan was carried out with the greatest care; the planting &c, was done by experienced men, yet the result, as everybody knows, was unsatisfactory in the highest degree’. (1883, The English Flower Garden).
The weak link in the team was probably James Pennethorne: me was a middle-of-the-road architect and a bad landscape architect. The view of John Thomas’ sculpture and fountain, with the wildness of the Long Water beyond, is a Picturesque landscape transition.
The Arch by Henry Moore.
Looking along the Serpentine,
Feisty squirrel.
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Central London photos – parks, buildings, street scenes and London life (over 130 posts)