London, United Kingdom
Dennis Sever's House
Unique tour of a historical home that engages all of your senses
Dennis Severs came to Spitalfields in 1979 and bought a derelict house saved by the Spitalfields Trust. He reconfigured it to tell the story of an imaginary Huguenot family who had lived there since it was built in 1724. Take a walk through time in Dennis Severs’ House in which the material things he collected become a cast of characters, the House destined to be their stage. We offer a range of tour options for visitors. SILENT VISIT An unguided tour through the House without speaking explored at your own pace. 18 Folgate Street is famous for the quality of its silence enlivened by ticking clocks, and crackling fires. When there is no chatter, you grow more aware of fragrances – perfume, wood smoke and oranges. Compounded by the intricate visual detail, this is an intense experience for all the senses. This tour takes place during daylight hours. DENNIS SEVERS' TOUR Drawing upon newly-discovered recordings and unpublished writings by Dennis Severs, The Gentle Author of Spitalfields Life has recreated the famously evocative tours that Dennis gave after he first opened his house in 1980.mLimited to a small number of guests at a time, this intimate tour offers an unforgettable experience. SILENT NIGHT A silent visit where shadows of the past are illuminated by the rich warm splendour of candlelight. This tour takes place during twilight and evening hours.
Audience Role
Tour the home and experience sights, sounds, and scents
Ages: All ages
Content Advisories
Interaction Advisories
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1
Events
5
Years on EI
About Dennis Sever's House
Dennis Severs moved into Folgate street with a candle, a chamber pot and a bedroll – and the house became his life’s work. Born in Southern California, he grew up loving historical dramas on television and moved to London five days after graduating high school in 1967, describing it as “Love at first sight.” Ceramicist Simon Pettet came to live with Dennis Severs and contributed his work in the house in the service of Dennis’ vision. From the beginning, Dennis opened his house to visitors and hosted tours for almost twenty years. Dennis feared his creation would be ephemeral and not survive him. Yet on his death in 1999 he sold his house to the Spitalfields Trust who maintain it and some of those who knew Dennis remain involved as trustees. DAN CRUICKSHANK’S APPRECIATION OF HIS FRIEND DENNIS SEVERS. The Dennis Severs House museum, located at 18 Folgate Street, Spitalfields E.1. occupies a house that was built in 1724. Since 1980 this fine house has opened its doors to visitors because, thanks to Dennis Severs, it has a compelling story to tell about life in 18th and 19th century Spitalfields. The story is told through generations of one imaginary family and chronicles the changing fortunes of the house as Spitalfields moved inexorably from affluent merchants’ quarter to crowded and decayed Victorian slum. Among stories enshrined in the tale of 18 Folgate Street is that of the silk-weaving Huguenot community that thrived in Spitalfields from the late 17th century and into the early 19th century. Still emblazoned on their former temple of 1743 on the corner of Brick Lane and Fournier Street are the words ‘Umbra Sumus’ – we are but shadows – a reminder of the transitory and impermanent nature of worldly existence, and of the fact that, for these transcendental Calvinists, the world of the spirit was more real than the world of the flesh. Similarly, Dennis Severs house hovers between worlds – between the tangible and the intangible, between fact and fiction, between the world of the imagination and the world of mere facts. Dennis believed you have to be open-minded and ‘innocent’ to really see the world he created, which is a powerful evocation of the past rather than an attempt at its literal recreation. As he said, ‘you either see it or you don’t’, and over twenty-years after Dennis Severs death his house continues to weave its spell and remains a place where – invisible to sceptics – ghosts walk in splendid array, where visitors can be liberated from the banal trappings of hum-drum reality and in which the shadows of what was can be more compelling than the often vacuous bustle of daily life. For many, once they have experienced Dennis’s house, life is never quite the same because their imaginations have been stirred and – in a way – they have been given eyes to see a little beyond the superficial surface of worldly reality.