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Private Tour of the Great Houses of East London with Chauffeurs UK
The Wernher Collection is a stunning collection of medieval and Renaissance works of art, all purchased by the diamond magnate and philanthropist Sir Julius Wernher (1850-1912), for whom collecting was a passion. Arranged within the elegant mansion's early Georgian panelled interiors, the Wernher Collection presents a glittering spectacle - a sumptuous arrangement of silver and jewels, paintings and porcelain. Nearly 700 works of art are on display here. Among them are rare, early religious paintings and Dutch old masters, minutely carved and painted Gothic ivories, finely wrought bronzes and silver treasures, all revealing the virtuosity of the medieval craftsman and the unparalleled quality of Renaissance decorative arts.
A showpiece of early 20th-century design with a fascinating history. This is the only English Art Deco house open to the public, built on a site of great antiquity and joined to a medieval hall. Commissioned by Stephen and Virginia Courtauld and completed in 1936, the house was filled with the latest all-electric gadgets, including audio system, centralised vacuum cleaner and under-floor heating. The exteriors boast fine sculptures by artists little known today (Alfred Hardiman and Gilbert Ledward), but whose works can be seen all over London.
Even more exotic is Virginia Courtauld's vaulted bathroom, lined with onyx and gold mosaic, complete with gold-plated bath taps and a statue of the goddess Psyche. Luxury emanates even from the centrally heated sleeping quarters of the Courtaulds' pet ring-tailed lemur, Mah-Jongg. Leave the opulent house and you enter the heart of a medieval palace. The Great Hall was built for Edward IV in the 1470s, although the moat is much older. Henry VIII was brought up here as a child. Surrounding the moated and fortified palace are 19 acres of beautiful gardens, with elements from both the 20th century and the medieval period. Features include a rock garden sloping down to the moat, herbaceous borders recreated by modern designer Isabelle Van Groeningen, a formal sunken rose garden, pergola, loggia and 'garden rooms' designed for shade-loving and winter-flowering plants.
For a Victorian of the Arts and Crafts tendency, an invitation to spend the weekend at Red House in Bexleyheath in the 1860s must have been the hottest ticket in town. Guests escaping the London grime would take the train to the rural station at Abbey Wood, on the newly extended North Kent Line, where they would be met and taken to the house in a crazily painted, chintz-covered wagonette. Under its arched porch, the massive panelled front door would open on its wrought-iron strap-hinges and there, waiting with a greeting, would be the young idealist, poet and painter William Morris and his new bride, the beautiful Pre-Raphaelite model Jane Burden.
Jane and her sister embroidered wall hangings. The artists Edward Burne-Jones and Dante Gabriel Rossetti painted tiles and furniture. Philip Webb, the architect, designed table glass and metal candlesticks while a mathematician friend was given the job of painting geometrical ceiling patterns that had been pricked out of the wet plaster.
Prices per vehicle, not per person
Please contact us if you need a quotation for a larger group
What is Included
What is Not Included
Telephone: +44(0)20 8404 2356
When calling from Canada or the USA please dial:
011 4420 8404 2356
©Chauffeurs UK Limited 2008
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