Place-making: The art of Capability Brown
John Phibbs (Historic England, £60)
No reader should embark on this formidable repository without reading in the introduction: ‘This book springs from over 30 years of professional practise… during which I have continually measured, recorded and thought about the landscapes of Capability Brown and his contemporaries.’
The author is the greatest living expert on Britain’s greatest gardener. He has studied in close detail the trees, the swathes of grass and water and the buildings that make up Brown’s myriad landscapes, the animals that populated them, the contemporaries who chronicled and criticised them and the exhilarating mix of philosophy, husbandry, politics, economics, art and science that inspired and influenced them.
Place-making is the vessel into which John Phibbs has poured all of his retained knowledge and opinions. as a result, it’s an important record that will, I’m sure, have a purpose and reputation long into the future after more lightweight volumes have been published and fallen by the wayside.
‘The author is the greatest living expert on Britain’s greatest gardener’
What is fascinating is the way in which he has performed an anatomical, forensic analysis of Brown’s work, slicing open every minute part of the body of his landscapes and chronicling them, both individually and as parts of a whole.
The challenge for the reader is to keep up with this weighty intellectual approach. accessibility is certainly not the book’s greatest quality and, without a pretty good existing level of knowledge on the subject, the reader will struggle. as has been the case with every book published for Brown’s tercentenary, frustratingly, we are left little wiser about this diligent, amiable but continuingly elusive leviathan. George Plumptre