Blair Castle, walled garden. View of statue of Winter by John Cheere 1742. Digital image of PT 4406
SC 767213
Description Blair Castle, walled garden. View of statue of Winter by John Cheere 1742. Digital image of PT 4406
Date 1973
Catalogue Number SC 767213
Category On-line Digital Images
Copy of PT 4406
Scope and Content Statue of 'Winter', Walled Garden, Blair Castle, Perth & Kinross This shows a marble sculpture representing 'Winter' made by London sculptor John Cheere (1709-87) in 1740. He is shown as a bearded old man wrapped up in a hooded cloak against the cold. The figure stands within a niche in the walled garden, along with other pieces representing the other three Seasons. John Cheere had a shop in London with a yard filled with lead, hardened plaster and marble statuary from which clients like James, 2nd Duke of Atholl could choose such sculptures as: 'Bustos of Poets', 'Ye four Seasons', 'two dogs in metal painted like life' or a 'Hay makeing Man'. Many of these survive today in the castle gardens. Blair Castle, the seat of the Dukes of Atholl, was begun in 1269, extended in the 15th and 16th centuries, and remodelled to resemble a Georgian mansion by architect James Winter in the mid-1700s. The south-east wing was built in 1743-5, and rebuilt to include a clock-tower to designs by architect Archibald Elliot in 1814 after a fire. The castle was 're-baronialised' to designs by architect David Bryce in 1869-71, who also designed the ballroom (1826-7). It was modified again in 1886 (J C Walker), 1904-5 (J McIntyre Henry) and 1920-1 (Sir Robert Lorimer). Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
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File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution: © RCAHMS
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