Pargeting - Plaster of Venice
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Rural Crafs Norfolk Suffolk

Here
is a tale of a lost art. It is about the passing of a style
of building decoration which lasted two or three hundred years
and seemed established, only then to fade away like another
mere fad.
Pargeting is decorative plasterwork. While the term sometimes relates to both
interior and exterior work, it most commonly denotes the latter.
There are references to it in England going back nearly 600 years although it
came to full prominence after the Great Fire Of London in 1666 which spawned
laws requiring the exterior of wooden buildings to be plastered in an attempt
at better fire proofing.
But the style had already begun to appear more widely during the previous century
on the better, timber framed houses, most commonly in Suffolk and Essex where
the wool barons, having made their money, liked to flaunt it. The finishing adornment
to the wealthy merchant’s pile was the adding of painted plaster motifs
depicting anything from flowers and vines to the supernatural. It spoke to the
world - or at least to the neighbours - of financial surplus. And through the
time honoured endeavour to keep up with ye Joneses, pargeting gradually became
an art form.
But then it faded away like many a voguish style before and since. Some old pargeted
houses remained as a reminder of what could be done but in the 19th and 20th
centuries, hardly any more was. Big houses were still being built but the Victorians
in particular went more for lofty and austere brickwork. Perhaps it was their
severity of outlook which precluded frivolity, or perhaps it was because their
money was being made in industries where mechanics figured more prominently than
aesthetics. Either way, the Victorians went with bare brick and pargeting more
or less ceased, leaving existing work and its maintenance increasingly in the
hands of lay workers. A lot must have been lost.

But
all is not yet lost for, lately in East Anglia, there is something
of a one-woman revival.
Anna Kettle is a plasterer and pargeter. She has not always been such; for ten
years after university she was a computer technician. But one night in a Suffolk
pub, she saw wreathing vines on the ceiling as one sometimes does and, smitten
by what she saw, she wanted to know how they were done. She was surprised to
find that hardly any practitioners were still working in the UK and despite having
never really dabbled much in plaster apart from a bit of DIY at home, such was
the strength of her inspiration that she decided to get involved. Starting her
career change from scratch, she embarked on a basic City & Guilds plastering
course and when that was complete, she got a job conserving old plaster.
The word pargeting comes from the old French - par jeter - meaning to throw or
cast over a surface. The designs are either cut into plasterwork or added by
means of stamping, moulding or freehand sculpting.
In the century before the Great Fire, it was Henry VIII who had done most to
make it fashionable when he hired Italian plasterers to decorate his elaborate
16th century Nonsuch Palace in Surrey.
That building, begun in 1538 and barely complete when Henry died in 1547, was
cited as one of the most extraordinary in Europe. It was described nearly 50
years later by one Anthony Watson, Rector of Cheam, who on entering the inner
courtyard, found himself ‘surrounded by huge figures of gods and goddesses,
gleaming white ... So moulded that they seemed to be leaping off the walls’.
He was looking at the work of the Italians, large stucco panels mounted between
structural timbers which were covered in carved and gilded slate.
Sadly, Nonsuch lasted only until 1682. Having passed down the line - with a few
economically and politically necessary diversions before and after the Civil
War - its ownership had, after the Restoration, reached Charles II who in 1670
had give Nonsuch to his favourite mistress, Barbara Villiers, Countess of Castlemaine.
Unfortunately, she was a gambling lady and not a very good one and she shortly
felt obliged to go in for a spot of non-Restoration architectural reclamation
- she demolished the place and sold the materials to pay gambling debts. The
work of the Italians and the inspiration for the pargeting vogue was reduced
to dust.

Ironically,
then, it was to Italy that Anna, like Henry, had to turn to
find the skills because these days, those skills have retreated
to Venice where they are concentrated in the Venice European
Centre of Architectural Heritage. The Centre is the only school
in the world now teaching the fine art of marmorino plasterwork.
The problem for Anna was that to become a pargeter, she would
need to take its three month course and the fees together with
that much time off work would be too costly.
Fortunately, she found out about the Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust which
promotes modern and traditional crafts and trades. By the autumn of 2001, with
a grant of £6,500, she was in Venice, returning then after the allotted
time to begin to create new work.
Pargeting is usually done in a lime putty plaster, reinforced with ox hair, and
with tallow sometimes added as a plasticizer and water-repellent. The surface
of completed pargeting historically was often protected by the application of
a limewash to which linseed oil or wax had been added. In the old days, the plaster
mix was sometimes reinforced with chopped straw, manure or wood shavings. At
times, even beer and cheese are said to have been used, presumably after an initial
mishap with a pargeter’s lunch box.
It comes in several styles with different techniques.
There is the combing of the a new plaster surface, often in a herringbone design
and usually arranged in panels to balance the windows and doors. There is also
stamped work formed by placing wooden templates on the plaster undercoat with
the final finish being brought up to the templates to form a contrast once the
template has been removed.
Then there is the use of moulds for repetitive work in reliefs such as friezes
with perhaps a vine or other floral motif.
But the real art is in freehand sculpted work where soft lime plaster mix is
shaped to produce the design.
Anna’s work combines all styles. At her workshop in the village of Glemsford,
she moulds various motifs for repetition - the grapes, the leaves, the flowers
or whatever the client wants - but these mouldings will usually be part of the
bigger picture, items to be added to bigger freehand work which she executes
on site.
She particularly enjoys creating designs specifically for individual buildings
and their locations, ideally on a wall where the sun casts shadows to pick out
the design. It is weather sensitive work - driving rain isn’t much good
for the art or the material of which it is crafted - which means that she is
less active in winter. But in the summer months, she travels widely although
the bulk of her work is still in East Anglia where the craft has long been rooted.

And
there is plenty for her to do in these counties. Three hundred
years ago, when the region was still the most densely populated
part of the country, albeit of a country with barely 10 per
cent of its present population, fine houses with fine pargeting
were a feature. But as development increased, later spurred
by the Industrial Revolution, they became an ever smaller minority
and probably got crowded out of the common awareness. Either
way, with the decline of the art, new work all but ceased and
the old work, though valued, was left to the protection of
a thinning band of craftsmen with varying degrees of the necessary
skills. Add in the decline of the wool industry and its associated
diminution of wealth and repairs were increasingly left undone.
It was a deteriorating situation but with this recent import of old school expertise,
and the new wealth which much of the region has found, there may be the beginnings
of a reversal in that trend. The most hopeful sign perhaps is that new buildings
are beginning to feature in Anna’s work schedule.
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Contact: Anna Kettle, 07976 649862