BBC Countryfile Magazine

Sculpture garden surprise

Burghley House, Lincolnshi­re

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Just south of the Georgian town of Stamford in Lincolnshi­re is one of the finest Elizabetha­n houses in England: Burghley House.

This grand country building – comprising more than 100 rooms – was built between 1555 and 1587 for Sir William Cecil, who was chief advisor to Queen Elizabeth I for most of her reign. Burghley is now owned and maintained by the Burghley House Preservati­on Trust, although members of the Cecil family still live in the property.

TUCKED BEHIND TREES

Step into the grounds and you’ll discover another side to this magnificen­t estate, a landscape reclaimed from weeds and scrub woodland and transforme­d into an arboretum and contempora­ry sculpture display.

The Sculpture Garden and adjoining Garden of Surprises are modern in comparison to the Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brownlands­caped parkland. The Sculpture Garden was transforme­d into a quiet woodland space in 1997 to exhibit contempora­ry installati­ons alongside permanent pieces, such as 2002’s Vertical Face by Rick Kirby sitting above the amphitheat­re. Look out for Elicoide, a spiralling aluminium wheel designed by Michele Ciribifera, along with the fun Maze created by Peter Randall-Page, and Giles Kent’s Five Carved Oak Trunks sitting within Lancelot Brown’s serpentine lake. Choose your own route along the meandering garden trail, with artworks hidden within foliage around every corner.

New works and perspectiv­es are introduced in annual exhibition­s, too; this year, Treasures of the East shines a light on the fascinatin­g objects collected by the Earls of Exeter in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Be sure to visit the deer park, home to fallow deer since the 16th century, and the watery, Elizabetha­n-inspired Garden of Surprises – opened in 2007 – with its fountains, moss house and enchanting sundial. In the house itself, climb The Hell Staircase painted by Antonio Verrio in 1697, before seeking solace in the artist’s trompe l’oeil masterpiec­e, the Heaven Room.

 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP Burghley House boasts a vast collection of ceramics, paintings, tapestries and silverware; Vertical Face by Rick Kirby in the Sculpture Garden; Michele Ciribifera’s aluminium Elicoide
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP Burghley House boasts a vast collection of ceramics, paintings, tapestries and silverware; Vertical Face by Rick Kirby in the Sculpture Garden; Michele Ciribifera’s aluminium Elicoide
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 ?? Abigail HamiltonTh­ompson lives in Hertfordsh­ire and loves walking and geocaching. ??
Abigail HamiltonTh­ompson lives in Hertfordsh­ire and loves walking and geocaching.

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