The first major event Tyers organised at the gardens was on 7 June 1732. Styled as a
Ridotto al Fresco – a
ridotto in Italy was a fancy-dress ball held outside – 400 visitors paid the one
guinea entrance charge.
Frederick, Prince of Wales, who owned the land the gardens were on, was among the paying visitors. The entertainment on offer was advertised as scenes portraying pieces entitled "The House of Ambition", "The House of Avarice", "The House of Bacchus", "The House of Lust" and "The Palace of Pleasure". But the moralistic undertones of the presentations were a disappointment to their audiences; the next
ridotto, staged a fortnight later, was poorly attended and a financial disaster. Shortly after the second ridotto, the artist
William Hogarth, who had an apartment near to the gardens at
South Lambeth, found his friend Tyers in a depressed state trying to decide whether it was better to commit suicide by drowning or hanging himself. Hogarth's artworks were satires designed to communicate a moral lesson in a humorous manner and he suggested Tyers should use similar methods to educate those seeking entertainment at the Gardens. As an art collector with diverse interests Tyers already had a wide variety of friends in the artistic community and he commissioned several artists including
Francis Hayman, – who Tyers later employed as his artistic director, a role he held for thirty years –
Hubert-François Gravelot,
Louis-François Roubiliac as well as Hogarth to undertake the task of transforming the gardens. The venue and its entertainments were promoted as being family friendly, yet to retain his profit margins Tyers ensured some areas remained unlit for the benefit of the sex workers. ==Denbies==