Nov. 5, 2025

David Matthew King: Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire

Belvoir Castle

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This September, LA-based artist David Matthew King will undertake a month-long residency at Belvoir Castle, developing a new body of work in direct response to the site’s layered cultural and physical landscape.

Living and working on-site, King will respond instinctively to the castle’s inherited histories and the quiet, often overlooked details of both its interiors and surrounding grounds – approaching Belvoir not as a static monument, but as a place shaped by time, memory, and use.

This period of close observation and physical engagement will become both material and method – gathering, painting, and repeating until the work begins to echo the rhythms of the site itself, mirroring the way cultural memory settles into buildings and landscapes over time.

Installed throughout the castle’s interiors, the works will act as both interruptions and echoes, reframing the space as something alive and responsive, rather than fixed or static.

 

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  • David Matthew King: Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire

    MORE ABOUT THIS LOCATION

    Belvoir Castle

    BELVOIR CASTLE

    Ascend to Belvoir's cloud-capped towers and airy terraces, where centuries of history unfold. Take in the regal Elizabeth Saloon, wander through the poetic Capability Brown landscapes, before concluding your journey at the Engine Yard, where the estate’s industrious past meets the artistry of modern craftsmanship.

    Belvoir Castle

    The current Belvoir Castle was completed in 1832 by John Manners, 5th Duke of Rutland and his wife Lady Elizabeth Howard, who moved to Belvoir from Castle Howard in 1799. That castle was by no means the first on the site. There has been a castle on the site at Belvoir since the Norman Conquest, when William the Conqueror’s standard bearer Robert de Todeni was given the land by the king. 

     

    By 1464, the first castle, in a motte and bailey design, was more or less in ruins, wrecked by the Wars of the Roses, and 60 years later it was reconstructed in a medieval design for Sir Thomas Manners, later 1st Earl of Rutland, in whose family it has remained ever since. James VI came to this new Belvoir in 1612, and later, during the Civil War, Charles I stayed at Belvoir, before the house was razed to the ground by parliamentarians.

     

    By 1668, a new house had been built at Belvoir by the architect John Webb for John Manners, 8th Earl of Rutland, but this only lasted just over a century before the 5th Duke and Duchess of Rutland began yet another building project, with the architect James Wyatt in charge of what was planned as a romantic Gothic building. This was almost complete when in 1816 the house caught fire, with the loss of most of the new build and many of the pictures. The castle was rebuilt again to the same designs and completed – for the final time – in 1832, with the architect Sir James Thornton at the helm. 

     

    Today, the house and its 16,000-acre estate is run by Emma Manners, Duchess of Rutland who, in 2016, embarked upon a two-year restoration programme to bring the lost plans of Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown to fruition. Belvoir remains the seat of the Duke of Rutland and home to his five children.

     

     

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