BRIGHTON.- A new display at
Brighton Museum & Art Gallery showcases rarely-seen views of the Royal Pavilion Estate dating back to the 1760s, alongside digital reconstructions of how it might have looked.
According to curator Dr Alexandra Loske, This display will survey the Royal Pavilion and its estate as it was and might have been, featuring rarely-seen views alongside discarded designs and recent digital re-creations. It will give visitors an opportunity to see unfamiliar, unusual and rare images, sourced almost exclusively from the citys own archives and collections.
Illustrations from the earliest printed books about the estate sit beside unrealised designs, early municipal maps and 20th century plans and images. Highlights include:
Images of the Estate before the Royal Pavilion was built, and early designs by Henry Holland, commissioned by the Prince Regent (1786, Marine Pavilion).
Unrealised designs by Humphry Repton (published 1808), who George, as Prince of Wales, appointed to apply his romantic style to the Marine Pavilion and its grounds. When his beautiful, hand-produced Red Book of designs failed to win him a commission he had it published for commercial sale, with fewer than 250 copies thought to have been printed. Delicate overlays pasted onto the images provided before-and-after perspectives, with Reptons ambitious proposals including a glass corridor around the entire East Lawn, an aviary, a pheasantry, a water feature and a clearer view of the sea.
Rarely-seen designs and aquatints giving lively views of the Royal Pavilion Estate in the 18th and 19th centuries, sourced from the citys collection and early popular guide books.
Depictions of fashionable Georgian society in and around the Estate, in rare watercolours, prints and drawings from the citys collection.
1820s and 30s drawings by Joseph Henry Good, who was commissioned by William IV to survey the Royal Pavilion Estate and drew up around 200 architectural plans. Detailed plans of now-lost servants quarters and the area around the South Gate give a new perspective on everyday life for staff on the estate.
Detailed digital 3D images of lost areas and structures of the Royal Pavilion Estate by RPM volunteer Colin Jones, largely based on the Good plans (more images will be available online).
Images of the Estates use in the 20th century, including in World War II, and never-before-seen inter-war designs for the Royal Pavilion Garden.
Real and imagined views of the Estate in popular culture, including illustrations and cover designs for books like Malcolm Savilles childrens adventure story The Long Passage (1954) and Georgette Heyers popular novel Regency Buck (1935).
Alexandra Loske has sourced almost all the displays inclusions from the city of Brighton & Hoves own archives and collections. She said: Were keen to really make use of the citys incredible collections, and keep making new items available for the public to see.
The display complements RPMs parallel digitisation project, which will make Humphry Reptons Designs for the Pavilion at Brighton (1808), John Nashs The Royal Pavilion at Brighton (1826) and other rare and early books and maps available to the public online.
It also comes as RPM works with Brighton Dome & Brighton Festival and Brighton & Hove City Council to realise a future vision for the Royal Pavilion Estate, starting with a major refurbishment of Brighton Domes Corn Exchange and Studio Theatre.