Grinling Gibbons Master Woodcarver to Royalty

Gibbons Wood Carving Technique Decorated Church Palace and Mansion

© Kathleen Duffy

Aug 18, 2009
Grinling Gibbons Woodcarver, Wikimedia Commons
Grinling Gibbons, influenced by the Baroque style of the Netherlands, created realistic still life woodcarvings from limewood. His skill has never been surpassed.

Grinling Gibbons worked in both stone and wood, but is best remembered for his exquisite woodcarvings which grace English country houses and churches, as well as the palaces of Royalty.

Where to See Some of Grinling Gibbons’ Finest Work

  • St James’s Church, Piccadilly - there are shell-festoons decorating a reredos (an ornamental wall or screen), as well as an organ case festooned with angels and putti.
  • Petworth House in Sussex - in the Carved Room, visitors can see faultless representations of musical instruments, doves, baskets of flowers, whorled scrolls and cornucopia.
  • St Paul's Cathedral - the choir stalls are his work as well as the Bishop's two thrones, and the seat of the Lord Mayor.
  • Hampton Court - commissions include frames, door cases, cornices and the frieze in the King’s Bedchamber.
  • Cambridge University - Trinity College Library has bookcases decorated by Gibbons’ with ciphers and coats of arms.
  • Chapel of Trinity College Oxford - there is a reredos executed in lime and pearwood.

Grinling Gibbons’ Early Life

Although of English parentage, Grinling Gibbons was born in the Netherlands in 1648. He was apprenticed to a family of master carvers called Quellin. Here he learned to carve not only in marble, but in lime wood.

The Baroque style was in full flower in the Netherlands. Gibbons incorporated this style into his work, being deeply influenced by the lush fullness of realistic fruit and flower paintings, popular at the time. Influences included the paintings of Flemish Masters like Jan Phillips van Thielen and Daniel Seghers, as well as Rubens.

At the age of 19 Gibbons moved to England where there was less competition. He worked in York, then moved to Deptford in London. London had been destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666 and there was plenty of work for a craftsman of Gibbons’ talent and originality.

Grinling Gibbons in England

He rented a cottage in Sayes Court, Deptford from the diarist, John Evelyn, who happened to be passing the property one evening. Through the window he saw Gibbons carving a representation of Tintoretto’s Crucifiction. Deeply impressed, Evelyn introduced the young Gibbons to Sir Christopher Wren and King Charles II. Eventually these meetings would result in important commissions.

Grinling Gibbons Finds Success in England

Grinling Gibbons established a flourishing workshop in Covent Garden, he and his team producing limewood and stone carvings for stately homes.

In 1672 he was admitted to the Drapers’ Company. By this time he was married and would have a large family of twelve children.

Charles II was only one of Gibbons’ patrons. He would also be employed in varying degrees by Sir Christopher Wren, James II, William and Mary, Queen Anne and George I. William III gave him the title of Master Carver.

Gibbons’ superb techniques with soft limewood, the degree of protrusion of the design and greater curvature, including using layers of lamination to give realism from every angle, became more popular than the English tradition of carving in the less malleable oak. (Some of the work Gibbons did for Wren was created in oak, and protrusion and detail is less.)

Grinling Gibbons Influences English Interior Design

Gibbons created the limewood decorative trophy thus giving status to woodcarving as an art form in itself rather than as mere decoration. An example of this work is the limewood panel commissioned by Charles II as a gift to Cosimo III de Medici, known as the 'Cosimo Panel'.

Gibbons’ unique trademark ‘cascade’, a tumbling profusion of flowers, fruit and animals, could be applied to panelling, furniture and walls.

Grinling Gibbons' influence on the interior design of the English country house was immeasurable and his artistry, although copied and even faked, has never been surpassed.

Gibbons died in 1720 and is buried in St Paul’s Church, Covent Garden, the area where he first found fame.

Sources

  • 'Grinling Gibbons, Master Carver to Royalty' by David Green in Discovering Antiques (Purnell, undated)
  • 'Grinling Gibbons, Aspects of His Style and Technique' by Miriam Kramer in Magazine Antiques (October 1998)

See Also:

Rachel Ruysch - Dutch Flower Painter - examines the life of the most famous flower painter to emerge from the Dutch Golden Age


The copyright of the article Grinling Gibbons Master Woodcarver to Royalty in Baroque & Rococo Art is owned by Kathleen Duffy. Permission to republish Grinling Gibbons Master Woodcarver to Royalty in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Grinling Gibbons Woodcarver, Wikimedia Commons
Wood Carving Grinling Gibbons Hampton Court, Camster2 Wikimedia Commons
Carvings Grinling Gibbons Wren Library Cambridge , Andrew Dunn Wikimedia Commons
Interior Wren Library Cambridge, Andrew Dunn Wikimedia Commons
Still Life with Flowers Rachel Ruysch, Wikimedia Commons


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