Creativity takes root
The Guardian Weekly|May 24, 2024
From Nikide Saint Phalle's Tuscan Tarot Garden to Barbara Hepworth's coastal oasis, artists’ green spaces are about somuch more than plants
Katy Hessel
Creativity takes root

I have a dream sometimes," writes Olivia Laing in her new book, A Garden Against Time. "I dream I'm in a house, and discover a door I didn't know was there.

It opens into an unexpected garden, and for a weightless moment I find myself inhabiting new territory, flush with potential... What might grow here, what rare roses will I find?" It's a beautiful book that explores the garden as a political site of sanctified and at times selfish seclusion in an unequal world - but also as a place of healing, hope, creativity and renewal. Melding biography with art, Laing looks at the restorative power of gardens during times of distress and plague, from planting her own during the pandemic to Derek Jarman's Prospect Cottage in Dungeness, Kent, where he settled after his HIV diagnosis and intertwined sculpture with growing santolina.

Reading this at the inception of spring, when plants are bursting out of their winter cocoons, reminded me of the artists who sought out gardens: as places of refuge, as places to exhibit their work, or, as Laing writes, to "obliterate the border between cultivated and wild". I love visiting artists' gardens. It's a way of seeing their work anew and can provide a fresh insight into their character, as both gardener and artist.

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