Chiswick House Gallery
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Images Dated

Chiswick House engraving N110153
CHISWICK HOUSE, Burlington Lane, Hounslow, London. "A view of the back part of the Cassina and part of the Serpentine River terminated by the cascade in the garden of the Earl of Burlington at Chiswick." Caption also in French. The Cassina (Little House) is also known as the Bagnio (Bath House). The Serpentine River was created by landscaping and canalising the Bollo Brook. Engraving dated 1750. MAYSON BEETON COLLECTION
© Historic England

Chiswick House, Red Velvet Room ceiling J970259
CHISWICK HOUSE, London. Interior. View of the ceiling in the Red Velvet Room.
The ceiling is inset with painted panels attributed to William Kent and has usually been interpreted as an allegory of the Arts. The panels around the edge, for example, incorporate musical instruments, portrait roundels of gods and goddesses (Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Mars, Diana and Apollo) and their appropriate Zodiac signs. In the central panel the messenger god Mercury hovers above a stone arch, below which is a group of figures with further emblems of the visual arts: Architecture is represented by a bare-chested woman with a set square and a cherub with a plan of a Roman temple, Sculpture by a fallen bust of Inigo Jones, and Painting by a woman unveiling a self-portrait of Kent.
The radical alternative interpretation of this symbolism is that it alludes to the ritual of the Royal Arch masonic lodge. Red is the Royal Arch colour, so the red velvet on the walls is symbolic, as is the red drape which is being removed to reveal Kent's portrait in the ceiling. The traditional implements of the architect and sculptor, depicted in the ceiling, are likewise masonic emblems, while the combination of an arch below a rainbow which occurs in the ceiling painting was apparently a common subject of early Royal Arch lodge banners. The suggestion, therefore, is that this room could have been designed by Burlington and Kent - both of whom were certainly freemasons - to function as a masonic meeting place
© Jeremy Young

Cavedone - Saint Gregory J020012
CHISWICK HOUSE, London. "Saint Gregory" by Giacomo CAVEDONE (1577-1660). St Gregory the Great (c.540-604), pope and doctor, established the form of the Roman liturgy and its music, the Gregorian chant
© Historic England
Italian, Painting, Red, Religion