Woodhouse Copse, Holmbury St Mary Explained

Woodhouse Copse
Coordinates:51.1958°N -0.4142°W
Gbgridref:TQ1079445320
Location:Holmbury St Mary
Area:Surrey
Built:1926
Architect:Oliver Hill
Architecture:Arts and Crafts
Owner:Monika Saunders
Designation1:Grade II
Designation1 Offname:Woodhouse Copse
Designation1 Date:4 August 1997

Woodhouse Copse is an Arts and Crafts style house in the village of Holmbury St Mary, Surrey, England. It is a Grade II listed building, with gardens originally planted by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll. Country house opera is performed by Woodhouse Opera at the annual Woodhouse Summer Opera Festival.

House

Built in 1926, the house was designed by architect Oliver Hill for the stage and film actor Amy Brandon Thomas and her husband William Deane Barnes-Brand. In 1939 Hill built another house for the couple, Burrows Wood in Gomshall, Surrey, which is also Grade II listed.

Woodhouse Copse is a large cottage orné, originally with a thatched roof, built in brick with weatherboarding and a large, central stone chimney. Hill was influenced by Edwin Lutyens and Gertrude Jekyll in his use of local materials and vernacular architecture.[1] However, his almost sculptural shaping of the thatch was distinctive.[2] He built similar houses elsewhere in the 1920s, including at Croyde, Devon and Knowle in the Midlands. Woodhouse Copse also featured timbers retrieved from an old mill at Coulsdon, as commemorated in a verse engraved in 1925 on a window.[1] The central shaft from the mill was incorporated into a spiral staircase. The house's thatch was later removed.

Garden

Hill laid out the garden with its terraces, drystone walls and circular steps. Over 1926–28, Jekyll drew up planting plans for the flowerbeds, and supplied the plants from her nursery at Munstead Wood, Surrey,[3] where Amy Brandon Thomas was a frequent visitor.[4]

Music

Musical performances are organised by Music at Woodhouse,[5] which is led by Monika Saunders, the house's owner. She converted an indoor swimming pool into a concert room and created a lakeside amphitheatre for opera. [6] Besides the annual opera festival, concerts are held throughout the year. There is a focus on using young performers,[7] including some drawn from the Royal College of Music and the Royal Academy of Music.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Vanden Berghe, Vanessa . Regionalism and Modernity: Architecture in Western Europe 1914–1940 . Meganck . Leen . Van Santvoort . Linda . De Maeyer . Jan . Oliver Hill: A Window on Regionalism in Britain during the Interwar Period . 2013 . Leuven University Press . Leuven . 978-90-5867-918-5 . 185–187 .
  2. Book: Richardson, Margaret . Architects of the Arts and Crafts Movement . registration . 1983 . Trefoil Books . London . 0-86294-031-1 . 139 .
  3. Book: Tankard, Judith B. . Gertrude Jekyll and the Country House Garden . 2011 . Aurum Press . London . 978-1-84513-624-6 . 170 .
  4. Book: Massingham, Betty . Miss Jekyll: Portrait of a Great Gardener . 1966 . . London . 98 .
  5. News: Best garden operas in London . Kimberley . Nick . . 19 May 2010 . 1 August 2013 .
  6. News: Is the private salon dead? Not quite . https://web.archive.org/web/20110219185007/http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/culture/michaelwhite/100051485/is-the-private-salon-dead-not-quite/ . dead . 19 February 2011 . White . Michael . . 15 February 2011 . 1 August 2013 .
  7. News: A steely Pittsburgh performance . . 16 September 2011 . 1 August 2013 .