12th March – 15th May 2022 / 11.00am – 5.00pm / Cost – Standard Garden admission.

For the first time ever, Hestercombe will display nerver before seen objects from its archives, showcasing an array of items spanning across five hundred years.

Unearth some of the amazing objects featured in our spring heritage exhibition, showing some of the greatest works and artefacts in our collections. We have selected from the 2,200 objects in our archives so visitors can delve deep into Hestercombe’s paintings, drawings, sculptures, poetry, photographs, rare books, archaeological finds and many more.

The exhibition compromises seven unique galleries, which take visitors on a themed journey from the seventeenth century to the recent restoration of the eighteenth-century landscape garden. The rooms are all centred around four key themes: portraits, possessions, pictures and poetry.

Through showcasing our nationally significant collections, we can tell the stories of the people who shaped Hestercombe’s past and present, whilst we look to the future; to the artists who are inspired to explore the history and heritage of Hestercombe to make contemporary work in Hestercombe Gallery.

Some of the highlights include:

  • The 17th Century Warre family money chest and the original key to open it
  • A haunting portrait of the young Francis Warre before his untimely death
  • A notebook dated back to 1663, which contains the jottings of Miss Margaret Bampfylde
  • Recently acquired C. W. Bampfylde watercolours
  • Photographs revealing the eccentric jacuzzi bath of Hestercombe’s Victorian owners, the Portmans, which is still perfectly preserved in Hestercombe House
  • Teddy Portman’s Game records and the picnic set he took on his hunting trips
  • Gertrude Jekyll’s original trowel and sketchbook
  • Finds excavated whilst restoring the Elizabethan Water Garden and Victorian technologies
  • Original manuscripts and volumes from a hundred years of poetical links, or more specifically, the poetry that inspired the title of this exhibition

Throughout the exhibition we will also be giving visitors the chance to view the Portman bath – an eight-tap spray bath that we believe was one of the first ‘jacuzzi’ baths installed into a British home by George Jennings Ltd., who was also the inventor of the first public flush toilets. Teddy Portman bought the bath for his wife, Constance, and it was installed in the early 1890s.

Visiting days and times will be posted on social media, so make sure to follow us!

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