History of the House
'He built the house as it now stands for his own artistic
delight. Every stone of it had been the object of his loving
care. It was a joy to him until the moment when he lay down to
die.'
Leighton’s sisters in a Letter to The Times, 26 January
1899
Leighton acquired the plot for his house in 1864 and began
making plans for its construction. For a number of years he
had harboured the idea of building a purpose-built studio-house and
had an 'old friend' in mind to act as his architect.
Leighton's Architect
George Aitchison (1825-1910) first met Leighton in Rome in
the early 1850s. He was the son of an architect and the
family practice had specialised in wharves, warehouses, docks and
railway architecture. When Leighton commissioned
him, Aitchison had designed no houses and would
be responsible for just a single further example in the
future. Nevertheless, his involvement with Leighton’s
house extended over 30 years and changed his career.
Through his work for Leighton he was engaged by a series of wealthy
and artistically-inclined clients to remodel and decorate the
interiors of their London homes. Sadly very little of this
work has survived and Aitchison's reputation has largely gone with
it. But as both Professor of Architecture at the Royal
Academy and President of the Royal Institute of British
Architects, Aitchison was a prominent and respected figure in the
architectural world of the late nineteenth century.
The First Phase of Construction
Work started on the house in 1865 and continued while Leighton
took an extended tour of Spain. In October he was in Rome and was
able to move- in on his return. Externally, the new house
was strikingly plain, with little ornament or
embellishment. The south facade, facing the
street, was given the appearance of an Italian
palazzo. The north facade overlooking the garden was
dominated by the large studio window on the first floor.
Internally the house was relatively modest at this stage,
consisting of just a dining room, drawing room, breakfast room and
staircase hall on the ground floor. Upstairs were just two
rooms; Leighton’s great painting studio and his surprisingly modest
bedroom.
The First Extension: 1869-70
Within three years of the house being completed, Leighton
undertook the first of what would be a series of extensions and
alterations. In order to increase the size of the studio on the
first floor, the east wall was taken down and the house extended by
some 5 metres. The extension incorporated a new canvas store
accessed via a trap-door in the floor of the studio.

The Arab Hall Extension: 1877-81
Leighton travelled to Turkey in 1867, to Egypt
in the following year and to Syria in 1873. On each of these
trips he collected textiles, pottery and other objects that were
later to be displayed in his house. However, the trip to
Damascus in 1873 laid the foundations for the wonderful collection
of tiles that line the walls of the Arab Hall extension. Further
examples were collected for Leighton by others, including the
explorer and diplomat, Sir Richard Burton.
In 1877, Leighton began the construction of
the Arab Hall. This was an ambitious and costly
undertaking. The model was an interior contained in a
12th-century Sicilio-Norman palace called La Zisa at
Palermo in Sicily. Aitchison and Leighton brought together a
group of their contemporaries to contribute to the project; the
potter William De Morgan, the artworker Walter Crane, the sculptor
Edgar Boehm and the artist and illustrator Randolph Caldecott were
all involved. The mosaics and marbles and skilled craftsmen were
all sourced in London, although Crane’s design for the gold mosaic
frieze was made up in Venice and shipped to the site in
sections.
The collection of tiles, mostly from Damascus
and mostly dating from the end of the 15th and beginning
of the 16th century are as important as any collection
of tiles held in the UK.
The Winter Studio: 1889-90
The problem of winter smogs and fogs was a
concern for many artists whose year was focussed on the submission
of their work to the Royal Academy at the end of March or early
April. Leighton’s solution was to commission a large winter studio
to be added at the east end of his main studio. Effectively a
greenhouse on legs, the Winter Studio was supported by pairs of
substantial cast iron columns.
The Silk Room: 1894-5
The last addition to the house was completed
only in the months before Leighton’s death. Built on the first
floor of the house, on what had previously served as a roof
terrace, the Silk Room was designed as a picture gallery to house
Leighton’s expanding collection of paintings by his
contemporaries. The walls were lined with a green silk and the
artists represented included many of the leading painters of the
day; Albert Moore, John Everett Millais, George Frederic
Watts, John Singer Sargent and Lawrence Alma-Tadema.