Help! Planning Reforms and the Gardens Trust

A more serious post than usual.

If you’re in the UK you’ll know that the government is looking to speed up the planning system which it says is one of the major obstacles to growth.

As part of that it is consulting on reforms to the system of statutory consultees.  These are organisations who play an important role in the planning application process by providing expert advice on significant environmental and heritage issues.  The Gardens Trust has been one of these consultees since 1995 and that means that local authorities have to consult the Trust on any planning applications that affect gardens and landscapes listed on Historic England’s Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.

The government is proposing to take away or reduce that role, a move which will put parks and gardens at greater risk of damage so the Gardens Trust needs your support to try and convince ministers that their arguments are wrong…

It might sound technical but its really important, so please read on to find out more…

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The Marjorelle Garden – Where Cactus Meets Cobalt

The Majorelle Garden is a tranquil urban oasis in the busy city of Marrakech, in the south of Morocco. It was begun by the French artist Jacques Majorelle in 1924 inspired in part by traditional Moroccan garden design but  with some additional touches of his own. His combination of striking planting and a vividly strong colour palette – which includes the garden’s signature  colour- Marjorelle Blue – certainly disproves the old adage that “Blue and Green should never be seen”.

The garden was rescued from neglect and the threat of development in the 1980s by the fashion designer Yves St Laurent and his partner Pierre Bergé, who carried out major improvements so that it now welcomes about 1.2 million visitors a year and is one of Morocco’s major tourist attractions.

If you read on you’ll see why…

Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Chocolate Box Ladies

“Chocolate Boxy” is usually seen as a term of critical abuse in art history but I suspect most of us have a soft spot deep down for the overly romantic images that the term conjures up. One of the enduringly popular posts on here has been one I wrote many years ago about an artist named Beatrice Parsons, and another which attracts a lot of comments was about the gardens portrayed on Raphael Tuck postcards  in the earlier part of the 20thc.   All of which could have been used on chocolate boxes as well as cards, calendars and jigsaws.

I thought it might be interesting to find out more about the artists who painted for postcards and chocolate boxes, but by and large tried in vain.  Their name or initials was often all that I had to go on. I didn’t even know if they were male or female and most seem to have left little trace.

I still haven’t come up with very much on any individual  but I did find enough to introduce you to a handful of artists who I”ve been calling my Chocolate Box Ladies – and before I’m accused of sexism – there will be a few  Chocolate Box Gentlemen soon.

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

A Franco-Japanese Fairytale Garden

There can’t be many owners of grand gardens who stumbled across their dream home completely by chance but that’s what happened to Alain Jouno in the early 1990s. Strolling through Paris on 24th May 1994  he flicked through a magazine on a newsstand  and saw an advert for an unnamed property for sale in Brittany. He immediately recognised the photos from a holiday years earlier when,  as a 15 year old, he had walked   through the grounds of a semi-abandoned chateau and thinking how beautiful and romantic it was…. a fairy tale come true.

On seeing the advert he recalls knowing instantly that his life was about to change.  A project began to form:  “My mind was wandering, images of gardens were following one another… I envisioned a tour of a vast botanical park, although the property had been abandoned to brambles and weeds.” He rushed home to talk to his wife. Luckily she agreed and soon afterwards the Chateau de la Foltière became home to the Parc Botanique de Haut Bretagne. one of the outstanding sites amongst the many other great Breton gardens, and one which has a distinctly Japanese feel.

Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

The Voice of the Nation’s Gardeners

We’re all used to seeing gardening programmes on the TV these days,  hosted by an array of “celebrity” TV gardeners like Alan Titchmarsh. However  earlier this year it was a much earlier celebrity gardener who was Titchmarsh’s subject when he spoke at the ceremonial unveiling of a blue plaque  by English Heritage  on this suburban semi in south-west London.   He was honouring  the man who paved the way for television gardening programmes when he became  the first TV gardener and later also  the voice of the wartime Dig for Victory Campaign  and as such “the Voice”.

I wonder if you know he was?

 

 

 

 

 

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment