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Photo Finish
November 14, 2007 by Stephen Lacey, Photographs Clive NicholsBig Ideas
Crafted Views The Plants It is fascinating when an artist—a painter, a sculptor, or a photographer—turns to garden making, and translates his or her well-honed principles of composition to exterior design and planting. Clive Nichols is one of the best known garden photographers, with images featured in countless books, magazines, and calendars around the world. His own garden blends his mastery of composition with the plant knowledge he has collected through his work. Even though Clive and I are both British, strangely enough it was in Connecticut that I got to know him, some 10 years ago. He and I had both been asked there on a filming assignment for BBC television. When we got back home, he invited me to come and see his garden in Reading, to the west of London. I remember being amazed and excited by his daring and original use of vibrant color on walls, pots, and sculptures. He had matched these with selected flower tints to turn his small backyard into a lively outdoor studio for himself and a wonderland for his two small children. So, when he recently told me he had moved house and had another garden established, I was eager to investigate. He now lives in a converted barn near Banbury, deep in the English countryside, and when I arrived on a summer’s evening, I found a picture postcard scene: his wife, Jane, and daughter, Hazel, saddling up their horses, his son, Robbie, playing with Murphy the yellow labrador, and chickens clucking and scratching in the grass. It looked idyllic. “That’s the theory anyway,” laughed Clive. Big Ideas The paint color does not draw from Clive’s previous palette of dazzling tints; he chose a subtle reddish brown to harmonize with the rust and gold of the property’s ironstone walls. This organic theme extends to the only other object in the composition, a wooden seat, simply but beautifully made from a beam of oak resting on stone supports. “Attention to detail, in design and construction, is really important,” he noted. “So many gardens are ruined by ugly and badly made details, especially tables and chairs.” Crafted Views For extra focal points and verticals, to frame and structure the internal views, he has planted a few trees: birch, aspen, crabapple (Malus ‘Everest’), and a pink-berried rowan, Sorbus vilmorinii. (A mistake, I predict, because the flowers smell disgusting and over time there will be more and more of them!) For seating he has made the clever choice of ironstone slabs, which give equally powerful horizontal form. He grouped them around a concrete dish of water. “That gives me some nice reflections to photograph,” he said. Again, no bright paintwork decorates the main garden, but scatter cushions provide flashes of arresting color. “I think most gardeners are far too conservative with color. It’s fun to be adventurous.” The cushions bring zing into the composition, echoing the lilac and purple flower tints of perennials such as Verbena bonariensis and Salvia verticillata ‘Purple Rain’. The Plants Clive has also taken trouble to study the planting in gardens he has photographed, honing in on some of the best of the newer plant varieties. These include the erect-spiked violet and blue hardy salvias S. nemorosa ‘Caradonna’, S. n. ‘Wesuwe’, and S. xsylvestris ‘Tanzerin’; the short catmint Nepeta racemosa ‘Walker’s Low’; and red Astrantia major ‘Roma’. In the shadier borders, fluffy carmine-purple Astilbe chinensis var. taquetii ‘Purpurlanze’ and lilac-pink Lythrum salicaria ‘Robert’ rise like sentinels from the surrounding vegetation. Such plants make exciting silhouettes when backlit by the evening sun, which Clive took into account when he placed them. The warm-tinted grasses positively flare up; his favorites of these include Chionochloa rubra, Pennisetum orientale ‘Karley Rose’, and the very fluffy Nassella tenuissima, which he has repeated along the backs of the seating stones. He leaves everything standing through the winter as a dry flower arrangement of parchment colors, stems, and seedheads. Tulips and other bulbs planted in the borders and in the cluster of bronze containers by the house door inject some lively color in spring. This is a much more subtle and sophisticated garden than Clive Nichols’s previous one, and an expression of his maturing skill as a master photographer. I can’t wait for him to move house again! |
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