No. 49 Addison Road, on the old Holland estate in N. Kensington, London, is a large detached brick house built, like Nos. 48 and 60–61, by Nicholson and Son of Wandsworth in 1856-57 (Sheppard). The house is on a corner (Addison Road runs north to south on the left had side) but the entrance is actually in Napier Road (east to west). Frederic Leighton's Leighton House (now a museum) is only a few hundred yards away on the opposite side of Addison Road. The tall hedge obstructs any view from there but luckily the studio in Napier Road is very visible: a big house, and a spacious studio too: as Hannah Lund explains in her biography of Herbert Schmalz, the artist who moved there in 1893, the architect for the imposing later extension was the very distinguished John Simpson (1858-1933; President of the RIBA 1919-21), and the extension cost a grand total of £1,187.

From 1880, Schmalz had lived nearby, in 5 The Studios, Holland Park Road, where his close neighbours were the artists Henrietta Rae and William Blake Richmond. But in 1889 he married Edith, a sister of Leighton's favourite model Dorothy Dene, and in 1893 the couple moved into this already substantial house, adding the large studio at the rear.

Links to Related Material

Bibliography

Sheppard, F.H.W., ed. "The Holland estate: To 1874."Survey of London: Volume 37, Northern Kensington. London, 1973. British History Online Web. 31 August 2024. https://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol37/pp101-126


Created 31 August 2024