Ickworth House, Park and Gardens

Suffolk

Free entry with National Art Pass  |  Full venue & entry details

The Rotunda at Ickworth House © NTPL/Andrew ButlerThe Rotunda at Ickworth House© NTPL/Andrew Butler Overview

Ickworth’s striking Neoclassical façade dominates the Suffolk countryside outside Bury St Edmunds. With over 1,800 acres of parkland designed by Capability Brown, the house and its grounds were created as an homage to Italy, the country so beloved by Frederick Augustus Hervey, the 4th Earl of Bristol. The Earl-Bishop spent his life travelling the continent, gathering together a vast collection of paintings, sculpture and artefacts. Already possessed of several houses, he conceived Ickworth primarily as a museum for his treasures. At his death only the Rotunda – the giant circular structure at the centre of the two wings, described by Hervey’s wife as ‘a stupendous moment of Folly’ – was nearing completion. The house was eventually finished by his son.

 

Permanent collection

Although Hervey’s treasures, confiscated during the French invasion of Italy, were destined never to occupy Ickworth, his descendants made it their life’s work to rebuild what has become an exceptional collection of art and silver. Paintings housed in the galleries include works by Velázquez, Titian and Poussin, while the collection of 18th-century portraits of the family is exceptionally fine, featuring canvases by Gainsborough, Reynolds, Vigée-Lebrun and Hogarth. In addition to one of the very best British collections of Georgian Huguenot silver, Ickworth is also home to an impressive array of Regency furniture, porcelain, and domestic objects.

 

Art Funded works

Jacob More made a career of producing idealised Italian landscapes. His Landscape with Classical Figures, Cicero at his Villa, painted in 1780 and funded in 1993, is a typical work, the misty soft-focus and pastel light adding to its appeal.

Hugh Douglas Hamilton’s The Earl Bishop of Bristol and Derry Seated before the Prospect of Rome shows Hervey seated at what is thought to be the southern tip of the Borghese Gardens.

 

Visitor information

Ickworth’s parklands and gardens can provide a day’s activity in their own right. The south gardens are modelled on the formal Italian style, while the gardens to the west of the house are more informal. Visitors can walk or cycle out into the park itself and up to the Fairy Lake.

Bright and modern, The West Wing Restaurant overlooks the gardens and can be guaranteed to catch any sunlight on offer. It serves everything from hot meals to snacks, and at weekends the restaurant is open for breakfast. If you’re after something rather more formal, try Frederick’s restaurant at Ickworth Hotel in the grounds.


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Pricing and entry details

Ickworth House, Park and Gardens

The Rotunda
Horringer
Bury St Edmunds
Suffolk
IP29 5QE
01284 735270

www.nationaltrust.org.uk

 

Entry details

Reduced price entry to exhibitions with National Art Pass

Free entry with National Art Pass (standard entry charge is £10.60)

 

Opening times

For seasonal opening hours, check the Ickworth House website

Parkland, woods and children's playground open daily, dawn–dusk

 

 

 


Exhibitions nearby

Events at this venue