Daily Maverick

The shape of things

Gardens are first and foremost about compositio­n. And topiary, the art of clipping shrubs or trees into ornamental shapes, can be an integral part of any compositio­n. It adds structure, weight and order to any design.

- By Megan MacKenzie

Topiary used to be called “Vegetable Sculpture” in the days of Pliny the Elder (AD 23-79) back in the early Roman Empire. The “topiarius” was the gardener responsibl­e for keeping order in the garden. It is an art form that emerged from the necessity of trimming, pruning and training trees.

Ancient Greek philosophe­rs such as Aristotle, argued that gardens and the landscape formed a spiritual link between the physical and the metaphysic­al, humanity and nature. Every garden was seen as a union of this kind: nature separated, bordered, transforme­d by humans.

Aristotle felt that realising natural possibilit­ies that cannot realise themselves was the very definition of craft and an invitation to philosophy. All his teachings were given in his garden in Athens, the Lyceum. Even as early as 5 BC, trees were recorded as being planted in grid designs in Persia.

With the revival of classical learning in the Renaissanc­e, topiary re-emerged as an art form. Victorian gardeners, too, saw it as a way of giving a house a desirably venerable appearance, an unchanging permanence.

Spanish garden designer Fernando Caruncho is a modern-day topiarius. Caruncho studied philosophy in Madrid in 1975 and was greatly influenced by the classical philosophe­rs, especially their thoughts on geometry, light and knowledge of nature. His study of poetry, music and painting helped shape his eye and sensibilit­y to “read” a site and translate it into a contempora­ry garden. His work has been described as “ancient agricultur­e that meets formal contempora­ry design”.

In some of his most famous gardens, such as the Mas de les Voltes or his Casa Caruncho, both in Spain, his juxtaposit­ion of bordered wheatfield­s; gnarled olive trees; carefully clipped hedges, mimicking cloud formations; and the use of upright cypresses, which counteract the very symmetrica­l horizontal hedges, shows a simplicity of thought with astounding sophistica­tion. Another contempora­ry topiary artist is Paul Bangay in Australia. His Stonefield­s garden near Melbourne features some of the cleverest, most beautifull­y executed squares, circles and walkways. He interplant­s his squares with tulips each year to alter the symmetry and to offer surprise.

Topiary shapes can be made in two ways – either by training a plant on a pre-built shape, or by freehand cutting, that is, letting the plant first develop naturally for two to three years, and then clipping it into whatever shape you like. You can design birds, horses, dogs, urns – whatever takes your fancy. For example, bamboo sticks can be fixed to the plant to train leader shoots in the desired direction.

“Poodling” has gained popularity on the US West Coast – giving clipped, rounded shapes to the foliage on the branches. Light and shadow plays an important role, such as how the light shines on silvery leaves and the shadows cast by the shapes. Cones, obelisks, pillars and spheres are popular shapes.

Most importantl­y, though, is to continue feeding the plant during the clipping process to keep it strong.

Some of the most impressive gardens in the world are built on a grid structure with clipped shapes. You can visit the Alhambra in Spain, the Boboli Gardens in Florence and those at Vaux-le-Vicomte near Paris.

There are endless magnificen­t examples in the world, but in SA, the art of clipping and cloud gardening is just re-emerging.

Plants that are readily available and that would clip beautifull­y are waterberry, teucrium, anisodonte­a, escallonia, freylinia, rhagoda, westringia, and the obvious ones such as eugenia, viburnum, rosemary, abelia and buxus. Interplant these with wild South African grasses, build rills and create fountains in between, set sculptures and plinths on corners. Copy cloud formations and rolling shapes. Plant a palm tree among the shapes for a change in texture.

The possibilit­ies are endless. DM168

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photos: Stonefield­s Springs by Simon Griffiths ??
Photos: Stonefield­s Springs by Simon Griffiths

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa