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Sally Nex

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Sally Nex

Tag Archives: conceptual gardens

Postcard from Chelsea: Dark and light

21 Thursday May 2015

Posted by sallynex in shows

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Tags

conceptual gardens, design, fresh gardens, RHS Chelsea Flower Show

darkmatter
Dark Matter
Gold and Best Fresh Garden

Now here’s a garden with a sense of drama. And ambition: I’m not sure anyone’s ever tried to explain the science behind dark matter in outer space through the medium of plants and rusted iron sculpture before. To be honest, I’m not entirely sure this attempt quite managed it (I’m still as befuddled as I ever was on the subject) but it had a lot of fun trying.

The steel rods were bent two ways at once by a chair manufacturing firm (the only ones they could find with the necessary equipment to do it) to depict the bending of light around dark matter – the only evidence we have that dark matter exists (you’ll have to excuse me if this doesn’t make sense – I’m reaching my own outer limits of knowledge here).

The garden is full of adventurous, dramatic planting combinations and huge energy and movement: ever-shifting grasses mean this garden is never still. I loved acid-yellow Hakonechloa macra ‘Aurola’ partnered with jet-black Ophiopogon planiscapus ‘Nigrescens’, and the kidney shaped green leaves of Asarum europaeum picked up in overhanging leaves of smouldering purple Ligularia dentata ‘Othello’ – same shape, but contrasting colour and size, and a clever design detail to steal for your own garden.

Postcard from Hampton Court: Conceptual

03 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

conceptual gardens, Hampton Court Flower Show

‘Light at the End of the Tunnel’: Matthew Childs’ moving depiction of his journey from injury in the 7/7 bombing through to jacking in his job in advertising and starting a new life as a garden designer. It was the deserved winner of Best Conceptual Garden.

Walking through the industrial boards-and-corrugated iron structure, you start in a dark and dank tunnel lined with hummocks of Asplenium scolopendrium and moss: the parallels with the Underground are unnerving, and the ceiling was dripping when I was there so I started thinking of other claustrophobic, underground places like coalmines.

As you walk through, the gaps widen and the light creeps in: the old, worn, stained sleepers give way to new oak and the planting lightens to dancing Gaura lindheimeri and pretty Astrantia ‘Roma’ and ‘Buckland’ amid airy grasses. Thoughtful, detailed, lovely.

The Coral Desert, by Antonia Young (Silver-gilt)
I loved this, with its clever juxtapositions (the driest plants in the world – cacti and succulents – made to look just like underwater coral) drawing attention to the plight of the coral reefs. And the ceiling was a two-inch transparent tray of rippling water. How cool is that?

I admit I make a beeline for the Conceptual Gardens at Hampton Court. More challenging (and often better-executed) than the big show gardens, they’re edgy, interesting, thought-provoking.

They always break the rules: they make me perpetually re-think what I mean by the word ‘garden’. I’ve seen conceptual gardens that are upside down, under the ground, under water and inside boxes. Most don’t look like ‘gardens’ at all: and that’s why they’re so inspiring.

I’ve always thought that the fact that conceptual gardens are so popular is a tribute to the gardening public. It’s easy to think ‘most’ people who say they like gardening are just boringly traditional and set in their ways, growing veg in straight lines and lining their clipped lawns with bright pink rhododendrons.

And some are. But many – I would even venture to say ‘most’ – of those who take the trouble to go to a flower show are far more interesting, and interested than that. That’s hundreds of thousands of people who relish a challenge and want to garden in a more intelligent, creative way.

There are now conceptual spin-offs at Tatton Park and Chelsea: and they are attracting more crowds and more discussion than anything else.

So perhaps it’s not surprising the mainstream designers want a slice of the action: ideas first seen in conceptual gardens are slowly, surely creeping in to the mainstream and sparking other little flashes of inspiration. It keeps design alive, new, inspiring, moving forward: and that can be nothing but good.

Postcard from Hampton Court: Sunday

11 Sunday Jul 2010

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

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Tags

conceptual gardens, Hampton Court Flower Show, pansies

The Pansy Project: Best Conceptual Garden
Sometimes the simplest ideas are by far the best.

A hole in the ground

09 Thursday Jul 2009

Posted by sallynex in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

alocasia, Colocasia, conceptual gardens, cyperus alternifolius, Hampton Court Flower Show

Here’s what stole the show at Hampton Court for me this week:


Much to my surprise, as I’m aware I’m usually a bit more conventional – even, dare I say it, square – about these things, it was this tiny experimental garden from Rebecca Butterworth, Victoria Pustygina and Ludovica Ginanneschi which for me beat into a cocked hat all the bells-and-whistles big show gardens and even the quirky Henry VIII’s Wives gardens (not sure jawbones will catch on as garden ornaments but you never know).

The thing I liked most about it was that as you approach, the mirrors create the illusion that the planting is stretching away underneath the ground like some subterranean cavern. It’s a truly lovely effect.

The planting was fabulous too – all big gorgeous colocasias (alocasias? never could tell the difference) and the slender elegance of Cyperus alternifolius: there were some very understated hemerocallis in there too in just the right shade of dusky pink and butterscotch. It was all beautifully well-judged and deservedly won not only a gold medal but also Best Conceptual Garden.

The garden has a painfully pretentious official write-up – presumably originating from the designers themselves which is mildly worrying – but I got around that by not trying to ‘understand’ it too much. For me it worked simply as a small but exquisite little piece of planting heaven.

Avant gardening #2

10 Wednesday Dec 2008

Posted by sallynex in design, garden design

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

conceptual gardens, modern gardening, Tim Richardson

The erudite and charming Tim Richardson got in touch with me after my earlier post about my doubts over “conceptual” gardens and so I’ve been having a very absorbing chat with him via email about what is, and isn’t, a garden, the relationship between gardening and art and many other thought-provoking questions.

In case you’ve had your head under a hedge for the last few years, Tim is a stalwart champion of modern garden design, and the author of Avant Gardeners, which as I told him I have on my Christmas wishlist. He’s kindly let me reproduce his thoughts in response to all my ditherings, since I thought they cast far more light on the subject than I ever could.

On whether conceptual gardens are actually gardens…
“I know what you mean about the ‘garden’ definition but in some ways for me it’s like the discussion as to whether gardens are ‘art’ or not. Quite interesting but a bit of a cul de sac — perhaps the definitions are not so important after all? In a way we need to call them ‘gardens’ because calling them ‘art’ or suchlike would be like trying to jump up on the coat-tails, like a puppy dog, of something supposedly ‘higher’ up the artistic hierarchy. We should be able to rise above such matters! Perhaps art should aspire to the condition of the garden . . . [faced as we are with a global ecological conundrum, I am not joking]”

And on garden history and modernism…
“At risk of sounding like a self-publicising lunatic, on the Jekyll gardens thing — sometimes people imagine I am some kind of iconoclast dedicated to smashing down ‘old’ ways of horticulture [a recent letter to Garden Design Journal said I should be made to crawl on my belly all along the A road to Beth Chatto’s garden and pay homage..] but in fact I think I am only qualified to make any suggestions having made a serious study of 20th c planting styles, to be found in an earlier book: English Gardens in the 20th Century, which includes a reappraisal of Jekyll as an avant-garde artist coming from the Aesthetic rather than Arts and Crafts tradition. That book is a decade by decade, careful evaluation of the development of planting styles — so I am not in any way ‘against’ plants, which is what yet another leading designer [good -humouredly] accused me of only the other night. But designers are not always very interested in historical matters I find.

“For me, future potential can only be discerned via knowledge of the past; the two go hand in hand. But it is surprising how little crossover there is between contemporary garden/landscape design and garden history.”

Those who stick their heads above the parapet unfortunately get shot at, generally speaking. But I for one am very glad we have people like Tim to make us think, and occasionally move forward from time to time.

Avant gardening

08 Saturday Nov 2008

Posted by sallynex in design

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

art, conceptual gardens, Gardens Illustrated, modern gardening, Tim Richardson, Tony Smith

I’ve been a bit preoccupied with Very Modern Gardens lately (just for something I’m writing).

By this I mean what’s rather meaninglessly called Conceptual Gardens by the RHS. What exactly does “conceptual” mean anyway? Aren’t all gardens conceptual – it’s just that sometimes the concept is more usually Gertrude Jekyll than Mondrian…?

Anyway – I’ve always really enjoyed the Conceptual Gardens section at Hampton Court. They’re not only fabulous works of art: they also really challenge what you think you’re seeing and how you think you see it. Did anyone see Forest2 by Ivan Tucker? All those silver birch trees surrounded by mirrors. And the wonderful experience of looking through the holes in the sides only to see your own disembodied face staring back at you, floating somewhere in the air among the trees. And as for Ecstasy in a Very Black Box… This really challenged, with no plants but a load of baby lettuce but probably the best evocation of what it must feel like to be a manic depressive that I’ve ever seen.

So – I’m thinking about all these gardens which are thoughtful and thought-provoking, based on skeletons or what it’s like to be a parent or autumn or, in one case, the Electric Sheep screensaver, and I’m wondering what exactly it’s all meant to be about. I love it as art: much as I love going to Tate Modern and having all my ideas about the way things are turned upside down.

But the middle-aged lady in me says, would you have it in your back garden? I think it’s rather revealing that the champion of avant-gardening, Tim Richardson, recently confessed to Gardens Illustrated magazine that his own garden was full of hardy geraniums. Constance Spry roses and kids’ bikes. I wonder, if Tony Smith offered to come along and paint the whole thing black and put multi-coloured shards of glass in it, whether he’d take him up on it?

I suspect I’m just missing the point here. But I kind of wonder, sometimes, whether there is a point. It may be art – but is it gardening?

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