Seasonal Rating: Spring
**** Summer **** Fall **** Winter ****
Hill-Stead Museum is one of Connecticut's best known historic
house museums, and is visited by many for the renowned collection of
impressionist art which includes original pieces by Monet, Degas, Manet, Whistler
and Cassatt. The house was built at the turn of the 20th century by Alfred and
Ada Pope, in the colonial revival style. Their daughter, Theodate Pope Riddle,
fell in love with the area when she was attending Miss Porter's School in
Farmington, and convinced her parents to move from Cleveland and build their home
here. An aspiring architect, she designed the 19-room home that her parents
retired to, and she was later to inherit. The property includes several
buildings, all designed and built by Theodate over the half century of her
involvement. In addition to the house,
there is a stone garage that once served as a stable, a carriage barn,
and an adjoining building known as the Makeshift Theater.
The house is set up on the highest point of the 250 fifty
acre property, overlooking the Litchfield Hills to the west, and surrounded by
former farm fields to the north and meadows to the south. Immediately south of
the home is a beautiful Sunken Garden that occupies a one-acre natural
depression. This is a formal flower garden that was designed in 1920 by Beatrix
Farrand, America's first female landscape architect. Today it has been restored
to its original grandeur, with formal beds full of perennials and annuals from
spring through fall. The beauty begins with tulips in April and ends with a striking
color scheme of blue, purple and white to complement the vivid colors of fall
foliage. This garden is a real gem,
surrounded by hedges, eight foot high stone walls, and with a green and white
summer house at its center.
What to Photograph
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Colonial Style Architecture |
While you cannot use your camera inside the home, you are
free to use it around the grounds to photograph the mansion and the other
interesting buildings, as well as the Sunken Garden and the surrounding
property. There are numerous buildings
from the early 20th century on the grounds to explore and photograph. The
mansion itself with its tall white columns enclosing a porch with slatted
rocking chairs is reminiscent of George Washington's house at Mount
Vernon. The house itself has interesting
lines, and in the early morning light it shines from the north side. The little
caretakers cottage to the south sits quietly beside the meadow where the sheep
meander from spring through fall. The stone garage, the carriage barn, the
Makeshift Theater all surround the house, and provide many interesting nooks
and crannies to explore and photograph.
|
Sunken Garden in winter |
You aren't limited to photographing architecture here. The
vista from the front porch of the house is beautiful, especially in the evening
when the sun sets. Watch for days with
especially interesting skies for the best shots over the Litchfield Hills. If
you love to shoot flowers and gardens, the Sunken Garden is a great place with
multiple formal beds laid out in an octagonal pattern. It is a good place to get close for macro
shots of individual flowers, colorful tulips and forget-me-nots in spring, antique
roses, fluffy peonies and lavender mixed with a variety of other blooms in the
summer, and white mixed with various blues and purples in late summer and fall.
There are also lots of possible angles to take overviews of the garden, or
details with the summer house anchoring the garden, the sun dial at the south
side, and the old fashioned white gate that leads out to the meadow where the
sheep roam. With the surrounding stone walls and hedge as a backdrop (or
foreground), the garden provides for a great shot even in the winter when the
structures play an important role.
If you are prepared to walk a little, there are trails that
meander through the wooded area to the east of the house just off the parking
lot, where you might find some interesting birds and butterflies to photograph.
A trail map is available in the gift shop.
When to go
|
Museum in winter |
Spring through fall are the best seasons, but don't ignore
the winter when the snow covers the ground. It makes for a very interesting
place to be with all the white structures with dark green trim against the
white snow. As in almost all cases on sunny days, early morning or late evening
is the best time to go, with bright overcast days being the next best time to
get good shots of the buildings without a lot of shadow and burnt out whites.
Directions
Map coordinates (for GPS):
Latitude: 41.721367, Longitude: -72.82752
Parking is available
free of charge. Follow the entry drive to the parking lot past
the house. There is a charge for entry to the museum, but the grounds are free
of charge. The museum asks for a $5.00
fee pp for photography groups and artists who work on the grounds. Check in at
the visitors center in the gift shop to inquire during open hours.
Hours:
Grounds are open sunrise to sunset daily. The
museum is open Tuesday-Sunday 10 am–4 pm and is closed Mondays and major
holidays.
|
Southern view taken behind the house |
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