Heaven is a place on earth
Country Life UK|May 08, 2024
For the women of the Bloomsbury group, their country gardens were places of refuge, reflection and inspiration, as well as a means of keeping loved ones close by, discovers Deborah Nicholls-Lee
Deborah Nicholls-Lee
Heaven is a place on earth

IN the early 1900s, the Bloomsbury district of west London was a hub for a bohemian circle of writers, artists and philosophers who would enrich our cultural and intellectual heritage. Although they became known as the Bloomsbury Group, much of their creative impulse came from the time they spent far from London, in the verdant gardens of their country homes. A new exhibition opening this month at London's Garden Museum puts a spotlight on four of these gardens and their female owners, displaying paintings, photographs, textiles, correspondence and even garden tools to tell their interwoven stories.

'A dream of what England had once been'

When writer and garden designer Vita Sackville-West moved to Sissinghurst Castle in Kent, the moated Elizabethan manor was in ruins and its gardens, which stretched out over woods, streams and farmland, were, she wrote, 'crying out for rescue'. A Gallica rose was one of the few specimens to survive the dilapidation and became a motif for a lost Eden that she hoped to re-create by trailing her beloved old roses around apple trees and designing, in partnership with her husband, the writer and diplomat Harold Nicolson, an abundant rose garden that typified her 'cram, cram, cram' landscaping strategy. Her vision for Sissinghurst, wrote her grandson Adam Nicolson in 2018, was 'deeply nostalgic and retrospective, a dream of what England had once been'.

Sissinghurst's disjointed buildings forced an intimacy with the garden and SackvilleWest traversed it at all hours and in all weathers as she moved between meals, work and bed the celebrated White Garden, with its piles of white pompom dahlias, tulips, gladioli and irises, doubtless offering welcome luminosity at night. With her husband's precise planning and her know-how, the grounds were transformed into one of England's most admired gardens, which she enjoyed surveying from her study in the tower.

This story is from the May 08, 2024 edition of Country Life UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the May 08, 2024 edition of Country Life UK.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM COUNTRY LIFE UKView All
All dolled up
Country Life UK

All dolled up

Automata made in 19th-century France provided inspiration for the work of American artist Thomas Kuntz and a vintage dolls' house, furnished with period-appropriate pieces, stars in a charity auction

time-read
4 mins  |
September 04, 2024
Just keep walking
Country Life UK

Just keep walking

ALMOST 30 years ago, a chap called Ian Bleasdale wrote a guide detailing all the walks on the Greek Island of Paxos. He and his wife, Elizabeth, had fallen for the island's rugged charms and, after many visits tramping its networks of old paths, decided to share their knowledge with like-minded souls.

time-read
2 mins  |
September 04, 2024
Delicious drupes
Country Life UK

Delicious drupes

THERE is a peculiar magic in growing almonds. However often you see their soul-lifting, frost-risking flush of white blossom and however often you collect a basket of homegrown almonds, it's hard to lose the sense of glorious impossibility, that somehow you've cheated geography and climate.

time-read
3 mins  |
September 04, 2024
It started with a blank canvas
Country Life UK

It started with a blank canvas

The garden of Patthana, Co Wicklow, Ireland The home of T. J. Maher and Simon Kirby An exquisite small garden is rich in colour and texture and has been imaginatively extended, as you would expect of a painter's domain, reports Jane Powers

time-read
5 mins  |
September 04, 2024
Escape to 'God's own country"
Country Life UK

Escape to 'God's own country"

Yorkshire folk are rightly proud of their county's magnificent landscapes and rich architectural heritage, but incomers looking to settle there face strong competition from local contenders for picture-perfect country houses

time-read
4 mins  |
September 04, 2024
By the light of the harvest moon
Country Life UK

By the light of the harvest moon

As autumn's whisper reminds farmers to reap their crops, inspect your produce for a suggestion of the winter to come, says Lia Leendertz

time-read
1 min  |
September 04, 2024
Building blocks
Country Life UK

Building blocks

We can expect fireworks: Labour’s draft plans for a new planning policy contain subtle, but devastating amendments that bear closer inspection

time-read
3 mins  |
September 04, 2024
Friends in low places
Country Life UK

Friends in low places

As special as orchids, as beautiful as bluebells and as important as oaks, our ground-hugging mosses are worth a look down, says Mark Cocker

time-read
6 mins  |
September 04, 2024
Talk of the ton
Country Life UK

Talk of the ton

During the golden age of gossip, the fashion choices of the Regency elite were frequently the scintillating subject of the scandal sheets, finds Susan Jenkins

time-read
4 mins  |
September 04, 2024
Slopes of hazard
Country Life UK

Slopes of hazard

Skiing, ironically, is the safest thing you can do in St Moritz, says Rosie Paterson, who traces the Swiss resort's love affair with adrenaline-pumping winter sports back to a Victorian bet

time-read
5 mins  |
September 04, 2024