William Sawrey Gilpin
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William Sawrey Gilpin (October 4, 1762 - January 20, 1843), was an English artist, drawing master and, in later life, landscape designer.
Gilpin was the son of the animal painter Sawrey Gilpin. He attended his uncle William Gilpin's school at Cheam in Surrey and in the 1780s taught himself the relatively new aquatint process of etching in order to produce plates to illustrate his uncle's books on picturesque scenery. Gilpin specialised in watercolours and in 1804 was elected first President of the Society of Painters in Water-Colours. He was patronised by Sir George Beaumont, through whom he met the picturesque theorist Uvedale Price.
Gilpin married Elizabeth Paddock; they had two (or possibly three) sons, one of whom seems to have remained dependent on his father. In 1806 Gilpin took a post as drawing master at the Royal Military College (at Sandhurst from 1812), teaching cadets to make accurate records of the landscape and the lie of enemy positions. This apparently secure employment came to a sudden end in 1820 when, in a round of post-napoleonic war cutbacks, he was made redundant at the age of nearly 60.
In order to support his family, Gilpin turned to a career as a landscape gardener, for which he had little qualification or experience beyond an artist's eye. He was helped and encouraged in this by Uvedale Price, whose theories on picturesque landscaping clearly accorded well with his own ideas. Gilpin's work also shows the influence of the later work of Price's old adversary Humphry Repton, who had died in 1818.
Gilpin seems to have been remarkably successful and, in his short career, reputedly worked at "some hundreds" of sites. Relatively few designs survive on paper or unaltered on the ground, but features employed by Gilpin included amoeba-shaped flower beds, gently curving paths through irregular shrubberies, and raised terrace walks. Sites where he is known to have worked include Scotney Castle in Kent, Nuneham Courtney in Oxfordshire, where he laid out the Pinetum which now forms the core of the Harcourt Arboretum attached to Oxford Botanic Gardens.
In 1832, Gilpin published Practical Hints upon Landscape Gardening: with some remarks on Domestic Architecture, as connected with scenery, which ran to a second edition in 1835.
Gilpin died at Sedbury Hall, North Yorkshire, the house of his cousin the Reverend John Gilpin, and is buried nearby in the churchyard at Gilling West.
[edit] Further reading
- Sophieke Piebenga, 'William Sawrey Gilpin (1762-1843): picturesque improver' in Garden History 22:2 (Garden History Society, 1994)
- Sophieke Piebenga, 'William Sawrey Gilpin, artist and landscape designer' in 'The Picturesque No. 48, (The Picturesque Society, 2004)