To support his family, Gilpin turned to a career as a landscape gardener, for which he had little qualification or experience beyond an artist's eye. He was helped and encouraged in this by Uvedale Price, whose theories on picturesque landscaping clearly accorded well with his own ideas. Gilpin's work also shows the influence of the later work of Price's old adversary
Humphry Repton, who had died in 1818. Gilpin seems to have been remarkably successful. In his short
landscape design career he reputedly worked at "some hundreds" of sites. Relatively few designs survive on paper or unaltered on the ground. Features employed by Gilpin included amoeba-shaped flower beds, gently curving paths through irregular shrubberies, and raised terrace walks. Sites where he is known to have worked include: • Bowhill House, Scottish Borders •
Scotney Castle in Kent •
Nuneham House in Oxfordshire, where he laid out the
Pinetum which now forms the core of the
Harcourt Arboretum attached to the
Oxford Botanic Garden. •
Shaw Hill in Lancashire •
Audley End House in Essex •
Marston Bigot Park,
Marston Bigot, Somerset. •
Wolterton Hall in
Norfolk. •
Blayney Castle in
Castleblayney,
County Monaghan,
Ireland. He was commissioned by
Lieutenant General The 11th Baron Blayney to improve the
demesne or park surrounding the 'castle' in the early 1830s. ==Author==