Skip to contentSkip to footer
Made possible with National Lottery Heritage Fund

Using money raised by National Lottery players, The National Lottery Heritage Fund supports projects that connect people and communities with the UK’s heritage. Vanbrugh 300 is made possible with The National Lottery Heritage Fund. Thanks to National Lottery players, we have been able to develop a nationwide project that aims to broaden the awareness of Vanbrugh through special displays, free education programmes and lectures, throughout his tercentenary year in 2026.

Learn more about the National Lottery Heritage Fund

Vanbrugh: Rockstar of the English Baroque is a new exhibition that introduces visitors to Sir John Vanbrugh – architect, playwright, soldier, spy.

Each participating venue explores Vanbrugh’s life and work, as well as his relationship with his patron and the buildings he created at that site.

The exhibition begins with his time in India and inside French prisons, where he was imprisoned as a hostage for a leading French spy in England. He would see buildings in both countries that would influence his later architectural achievements. Before then, he was a controversial dramatist and built the Queen’s Theatre in London’s Haymarket. He was invited to join the exclusive Kit-Cat Club, who’s members were mainly Whig politicians, writers and artists. Most of his building commissions would come from his friends and other contacts he made in the club.

Visitors are then introduced to his influences and his work as an architect. His major commissions were Castle Howard, Blenheim Palace, Grimsthorpe and Kimbolton castles, Seaton Delaval Hall and Stowe House. His work would go on to influence architects of the Gothic Revival and landscape designers of the picturesque.

This part of the exhibition has been written by historian Rory Fraser. It is illustrated with newly commissioned photographs of the houses, original plans and contemporary paintings and portraits.

Website Images-2

Venues

Each venue plays a unique role in telling the story of Sir John Vanbrugh, with every house hosting its own distinct part of the exhibition. Across the sites, displays are brought to life through newly commissioned photography, original architectural plans, and a rich selection of contemporary paintings and portraits, offering fresh perspectives on Vanbrugh’s work and legacy.

Staging the Baroque: Vanbrugh at Castle Howard builds on themes from Rockstar of the English Baroque. Curated by architect Roz Barr, the exhibition combines striking architectural models, film, and immersive storytelling to explore the remarkable creative partnership behind one of Britain’s most iconic houses.

Meanwhile, Blenheim Palace presents Blueprints of Power, curated by Carmen Alvarez. This exhibition focuses on Vanbrugh’s high-stakes collaboration with Sarah Churchill, First Duchess of Marlborough, revealing the ambition, tension, and vision that shaped Blenheim’s creation.

While these two venues offer more expansive, standalone exhibitions, Seaton Delaval Hall, Stowe House, Grimsthorpe Castle, and Kimbolton Castle each feature a selection of the V300 exhibition panels, made possible through The National Lottery Heritage Fund, allowing visitors to engage with the wider Vanbrugh300 story within the context of these remarkable houses.

Together, these exhibitions invite you to experience Vanbrugh’s world in different ways at each location. Explore the site nearest to you and discover more about his extraordinary life and architecture.

V300_SDH_ExhibitPanels_(c)TheHouseOfHues-2_8inch

V300_SDH_ExhibitPanels_(c)TheHouseOfHues-17_8inch

 

Castle Howard

20th March – 31st October

Celebrating Castle Howard’s beautiful Baroque architecture, this new exhibition, curated by architect Roz Barr, explores Sir John Vanbrugh’s visionary use of scale, shadow and light in the creation of one of Britain’s most iconic stately homes. The exhibition traces the moment when an ambitious Vanbrugh with a teeming imagination encountered the equally ambitious Charles Howard, 3rd Earl of Carlisle in the confines of the Kit-Cat Club in London, and was commissioned to design the Earl’s new house. Vanbrugh’s bold, theatrical vision for a grand country mansion was captivating, and inspired Carlisle to take a chance on this would-be architect who had never built anything before, thereby giving rise to the extraordinary Castle Howard. Staging the Baroque combines showstopping architectural models, film and historical storytelling to recount this extraordinary tale of inspirational collaboration.

Book Your Tickets

 

5

 

Seaton Delaval Hall

25th March – 18th October  

Admiral George Delaval commissioned Vanbrugh to design the hall, which he did by combining elements of his English Baroque with his ‘castle air.’ One of the most striking features, and unique for Vanbrugh, are the oval-shaped spiral staircases that allowed guests to be shown the estate from the roof. Celebrating Seaton Delaval, where volunteers and crafts people have brought it back to life, this exhibition honours their work as well as that of Vanbrugh.

Book Your Tickets

Seaton Delaval

Grimsthorpe Castle

30th April – 30th September

Discover Vanbrugh’s political relationship to his ‘old friend and ally,’ Robert Bertie, who he travelled with to visit William of Orange in the Netherlands. Bertie commissioned Vanbrugh to redesign Grimsthorpe Castle, where his mature style combined scale and symmetry to convey martial strength. One of Vanbrugh’s last major works, his design promoted the Bertie family’s social standing and Enlightenment learning. The exhibition guides visitors to identify Vanbrugh-designed features in the house. 

Book Your Tickets

David Valinsky Photography Grimsthorpe Hall-2

Stowe House

29th June – 31st August

Vanbrugh was commissioned by fellow Kit-Cat Club member, Sir Richard Temple, to work on the house and gardens. The exhibition uses many contemporary illustrations to show Vanbrugh’s work, some of which has been replaced or moved. Four of Vanbrugh’s garden buildings and parts of his house survive. He transformed a country manor into one of the great aristocratic seats of the 1700s, while his naturalistic approach in the gardens influenced famous landscape designer ‘Capability’ Brown. The exhibition guides visitors to identify Vanbrugh-designed features in the famous gardens. 

Book your tickets

The North Front of Stowe House ©Stowe School

Kimbolton Castle

Kimbolton’s Charles Montagu was a close friend of John Vanbrugh and an influential patron of the arts who brought the artist, Pellegrini from Venice to work on his home. You can see the murals painted by Pellegrini in the house today. Vanbrugh was influenced by Kimbolton’s history to design a building with a ‘castle air’ that combined medieval detailing with a symmetrical style. This would go on to influence architects of the Gothic Revival. The exhibition guides visitors to identify Vanbrugh-designed features in the house. 

As Kimbolton Castle is a working school, it is not open to the public year-round. However, you will have the opportunity to view the exhibition during their open day (4th October), as well as during their free talks and tours on the following dates: 2nd, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 13th July, with more dates to follow.

Book Your Tickets

 

DJI_0037-2

Blenheim Palace

14th February - 31st May

Blenheim Palace's new exhibition Blueprints of Power shines a light on Sir John Vanbrugh’s brilliant mind, his rivalries and ambitions and take visitors on an immersive visual experience through his early life and theatrics as playwright all the way to his high-stakes partnership with Sarah Churchill, first Duchess of Marlborough. Blueprints of Power combines immersive experiences with rare archive material, recognisable outfits and costumes and the dramatic stories behind them. Visitors will be able to step back in time and discover how this flamboyant architect’s relationship with high society helped to define an age.

Book Your Tickets

Website Images

Sign up to our newsletter