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IG_51: Design for an addition to Leighton House, 12 Holland Park Road, London: section through the Arab Hall
(GBR_London_RoyalInstituteOfBritishArchitects_IG_51)

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Title

Design for an addition to Leighton House, 12 Holland Park Road, London: section through the Arab Hall

Type of Object
Dimensions
48 x 33.4 cm
Artist / Producer
Dating
19th July 1877
Location
Inventory Number
SC124/4(5), RIBA12499
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Francine Giese 2025

Iconography

Description

Section through the Arab Hall at Leighton House in Kensington (London). The drawing reproduces the elevation of the west wall of the Arab Hall. The stucco and glass windows installed in the centre of the west wall and at the bottom of the central dome are visible on the drawing. The design of the stucco lattices and the coloured glass are recognizable. The double arch, the cypress tree, and the flowers in a vase of the lower window are precisely depicted. The windows in the dome show two variations of the flowers-in-a-vase motif.

Iconclass Code
41A33 · window
48C141 · representation of real building (either existing or having existed)
48C1412 · interior ~ representation of a building
48C1424 · section ~ architectural design or model
48C1623 · dome ~ architecture
Iconclass Keywords
Inscription

ARAB HALL
FOR F. LEIGHTON ESQ RA

Signature

G. Aitchison
(bottom right)

Materials, Technique and State of Preservation

Technique

Watercolour and gold heightened with white

History

Research

Presentation drawing showing the elevation of the west wall of the Arab Hall of the studio-house of the Victorian artist and collector Frederic Leighton (1830–1896) at 12 Holland Park Road in Kensington (London). Leighton House was constructed between 1865 and 1895 in five phases after plans by one of Leighton’s close friends, the British architect George Aitchison (1825–1910).

Leighton House is one of the most famous 19th-century artist’s homes, combining living, working, and exhibition spaces, designed according to Leighton’s needs and aesthetic visions (Sweetman, 1988, pp. 189–192; Robbins/Suleman, 2005; Robbins, 2011; Anderson, 2011; Droth, 2011; Vanoli, 2012; Roberts, 2018; Gibson, 2020; Robbins, 2023). It reflects the exotic taste of the time (Walkley, 1994, pp. 52–56), which finds close parallels in the now-lost artist’s studio of the British painter Frank Dillon (1832–1908). Dillon, who visited Cairo on several occasions in the 1850s – 1870s, recreated a Cairene interior with wall tiles, wooden furnishings, and two stucco and glass windows in his studio in Kensington (Conway, 1882, p. 196; Walkley, 1994, p. 70), as attested by a wood engraving published in the second volume of Georg Ebers’s Aegypten in Bild und Wort (Ebers, 1880, p. 96, see IG_117).

Work on the Arab Hall extension began in 1877 and continued until 1881. At the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), various drawings by Aitchison of the Arab Hall are conserved (IG_50–53). This presentation drawing was exhibited together with IG_52, which shows the elevation of the west wall of the Arab Hall, at the Royal Academy in 1880. According to an anonymous report on Leighton House and the Arab Hall, published on 1 October 1880 in The Building News, the drawings by Aitchison exhibited showed ‘the decorations as completed’ (Anon., 1880, p. 384).

The drawing reproduces the interior of the Arab Hall and its elaborate decoration faithfully. As many Orientalizing interiors, it is an amalgam of various Islamic styles, arranged around the central theme of the 12th-century Zisa Palace in Palermo. The Arab Hall reflects the patron’s and the architect’s fascination for the East. While Leighton was familiar with Islamic art and architecture through his travels to Sicily, Algeria, Turkey, Egypt, Syria, Spain, and Morocco, Aitchison was acquainted with Cairo, among other Islamic cities.

The double window, installed in the centre of the west wall (IG_56) and three of the eight windows placed at the bottom of the central dome (IG_57) are visible on the drawing. The delicate design of the stucco lattices and the coloured glass are recognizable. The framing double arch, the cypress tree and the flowers in a vase of the lower window are precisely depicted. In contrast, the iconographic variety of the windows in the dome (flowers in a vase, cypress tree, Arabic inscription) is not conveyed.

Dating
19th July 1877
Previous Locations
Related Locations
Place of Manufacture

Provenance

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Aitchison, G. (1904). Coloured Glass. The Architectural Journal XI(3), pp. 53–65.

Anderson, A. (2011). The 'New Old School': Furnishing with Antiques in the Modern Interior–Frederic, Lord Leighton’s Studio-House and Its Collections. Journal of Design History, 24(4), pp. 315–338.

Anon. (1880, October 1). Artists' Homes, No. 7. Sir Frederick Leighton's House and Studio. The Building News, 1880, p. 384.

Barringer, T., & Prettejohn, E. (eds.) (1999). Frederic Leighton: Antiquity Renaissance Modernity (Studies in British Art, 5). New Haven & London: Yale University Press.

Butler, V. (1893, July–December). An Hour at Sir Frederick Leighton's. Lippincott's Monthly Magazine. A Popular Journal of General Literature, Science, and Politics, III, pp. 463–466.

Clarke, C. P., & Hayter Lewis, T. (1881). Persian Architecture and Construction. Transactions of the Royal Institute of British Architects, Session 1880–1881 (pp. 161–174). London: Royal Institute of British Architects.

Conway, M. D. (1882). Travels in South Kensington with Notes on Decorative Art and Architecture in England. London: Trübner & Co.

Droth, M. (2011). Leighton's House: Art In and Beyond the Studio. Journal of Design History, 24(4), 339–358.

Ebers, G. (1880). Aegypten in Bild und Wort. Dargestellt von unseren ersten Künstlern, vol. 2. Stuttgart: Eduard Hallberger.

Edwards, J. (2010). The Lessons of Leighton House: Aesthetics, Politics, Erotics. In Rethinking the Interior, c. 1867–1896. Aestheticism and Arts and Crafts (pp. 85–110). Farnham: Ashgate.

Gibson, M. (2020). ‘An Oriental Kiosk’: The Building of the ‘Arab Hall’ at Leighton House in London. Orientations, 51(2), 2–15.

Rhys, E. (1900). Frederic Lord Leighton. An Illustrated Record of His Life and Work. London.

Robbins, D. (2011). Leighton House Museum. Holland Park Road, Kensington. The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.

Robbins, D. (2023). Leighton House. Step into a painter's world. The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.

Robbins, D. (ed.) (2010). Closer to Home. The Restoration of Leighton House and Catalogue of the Reopening Displays. The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, 2010.

Robbins, D., & Suleman, R. (2005). Leighton House Museum. Holland Park Road, Kensington. The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea Museums and Arts Service.

Roberts, M. (2018). The Resistant Materiality of Frederic Leighton’s Arab Hall. British Art Studies, 9. https://dx.doi.org/10.17658/issn.2058-5462/ issue-09/mroberts.

Stone, J. H. (1905, October). Leighton House. The English Illustrated Magazine, 3–17.

Sweetman, J. (1988). The Oriental obsession. Islamic inspiration in British and American art and architecture 1500–1920. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Walkley, G. (1994). Artists' Houses in London 1764–1914. Aldershot: Scolar Press.

Wright, W. (1896). Lord Leighton at Damascus and After. The Bookman, March 1896, 183–185.

Image Information

Name of Image
GBR_London_RoyalInstituteOfBritishArchitects_IG_51
Credits
RIBA Collections

Linked Objects and Images

Linked Objects
Design for the elevation of a wall with Zenana in the Arab Hall, Leighton House, 12 Holland Park Road, London
Replica of a stucco and glass window with cypress tree (left) and flowers in a vase (right)
Eight replicas of stucco and glass windows

Citation suggestion

Giese, F. (2025). Design for an addition to Leighton House, 12 Holland Park Road, London: section through the Arab Hall. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved December 5, 2025 from https://vitrosearch.ch/objects/2712895.

Record Information

Reference Number
IG_51