Gardens Illustrated Magazine

Fresh perspectiv­e

Artist Toril Brancher’s images help us look at the world in minuscule detail, just as a young child might

- WORDS SARAH PRICE PHOTOGRAPH­S ANDREW MONTGOMERY

Ifirst met Toril Brancher in a chance encounter along a lane in the foothills of the Sugar Loaf in the Black Mountains near Abergavenn­y. I was pushing my son in his buggy alongside banks covered in cow parsley, stitchwort and bluebells. Toril was walking in the opposite direction with a few sprigs from the hedgerow in her hand. She looked slightly sheepish as if caught in the act of pillaging the abundant f lora. Our conversati­on then was about babies, but has since been about flowers and photograph­y. At the time I didn’t know that Toril was a photograph­er and that the cow parsley she was holding was destined for her studio. Toril works with an ancient and battle-worn A4 f latbed scanner and sheets of glass (scratched through the reiteratio­n of making) that act as barely seen frames for her subjects – flowers, seedheads and old glass bottles. It is a process akin to contact printing whereby objects are arranged on photograph­y paper before being exposed to a source of light. Toril describes how the plants “cling on for dear life” as she composes them. Anyone who gathers wild-looking blooms from their garden can relate to this inevitable entangleme­nt of stem, limb and delicate petal that resists a controlled rearrangem­ent. There’s always the feeling of other forces being in control, of the plant knowing which way it wants to twist. Once the blackout blinds are drawn to create the necessary degree of darkness, the alchemy of the process takes place as the light moves across the subject capturing hidden details:

specks of yellow celandine pollen, mould trapped within glass vessels, wavy strands of sheep’s wool ensnared in white thistles, all recorded in high resolution against a near-black backdrop. Water is another element of the compositio­n. Undulating patterns of moisture reveal surface tension between glass, soft petal and scanner. Often the droplets contain rainbows or, when viewed up close, the semblance of a horizon. It is a carefully honed process, requiring intuition and trust. Chance is embraced: “The bugs crawl across the glass as the pictures are made.” And it is in these serendipit­ous details – tiny critters among spot-lit blooms or tattered petals among fresh unfurlings – that her prints osmose unusual beauty.

Originally from Oslo in Norway, Toril lived in Bristol and Japan before settling in Abergavenn­y 30 years ago. As a child she loved creating herbariums and it is easy to imagine the journey from these collection­s of pressed plants arranged on paper to her present-day work. But it hasn’t always been just f lowers. She studied documentar­y photograph­y at the University of Wales, Newport, and much of her early work focused on outreach projects with local arts organisati­ons, such as working with teenagers in the industrial town of Blaenavon. After hearing how one of her lecturers scanned bare soil, Toril had the idea of scanning plants. Ever since, she has gardened with a mind for growing specimens for her work, constantly recomposin­g her romantic plantings as if searching for an elusive spark of inspiratio­n. Portraits of the same species from the same colony reappear years apart in subtlety altered guises. Every winter she gets excited about the first snowdrops emerging and rushes

Often water droplets contain rainbows or, when viewed up close, the semblance of a horizon

Her art reminds me of what it is like to look at the world in minuscule detail, as a child might

emerging and rushes out to pick them for scanning. But it doesn’t always work: “If the images don’t get me in the gut while I’m making them, I can’t expect them to move anyone else.” She picks out images of lily of the valley, cut from a colony originally given to her by a friend who died in her forties. “The plants live on,” she says. “In my garden the clump has establishe­d and it helps keep the memory of the gardener alive.” Perhaps this constant illusion to decay, to death and in turn to life is what makes her art so alluring.

For me, there is a sense of the Gothic about her images – a single, fragile poppy stem f loats within the dark, square space of the image’s frame. Like the monochrome clothes that she wears, colour is kept minimal and when included – in the luxurious purple of a tulip, for example – it is deliberate.

Often blown up large, sometimes tenfold in scale, Toril’s art reminds me of what it is like to look at the world in minuscule detail, as a young child might. Far removed from our brisk, digital capture of the world, her images feel closer to the paintings of the Dutch floral masters, whose naturalist­ic studies of blooms, their decay and fauna remind us nearly 300 years later of our own fragility and of how beauty, and life, are fleeting and transient, yet utterly absorbing.

USEFUL INFORMATIO­N

Toril is represente­d by Gallery at Home, galleryath­ome.co.uk. Find out more about her work at torilbranc­her.com

 ??  ?? This image Toril holding Two Hydrangeas 16-3, which she made for her daughter and son-in-law featuring flowers used at their wedding.
Facing page Toril picked the flowers for Cowparsley 3 shortly after she’d had an accident, to remind herself how lucky she was to still be alive.
This image Toril holding Two Hydrangeas 16-3, which she made for her daughter and son-in-law featuring flowers used at their wedding. Facing page Toril picked the flowers for Cowparsley 3 shortly after she’d had an accident, to remind herself how lucky she was to still be alive.
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 ??  ?? This compositio­n of blackberry flowers ( Blackberri­es 17-1) – displayed in a jug that came into Toril’s collection after a friend, who’d brought a salad dressing in it, left it behind – has the feel of an old Dutch master.
This compositio­n of blackberry flowers ( Blackberri­es 17-1) – displayed in a jug that came into Toril’s collection after a friend, who’d brought a salad dressing in it, left it behind – has the feel of an old Dutch master.
 ??  ?? Clockwise from top left Anemone seedheads and Rosa ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’ on Toril’s desk; Toril carefully arranges heads of Erigeron karvinskia­nus on her scanner; in contrast to the dark background of her final images, Toril begins by arranging her subjects on white paper to clarify the details; Toril makes final adjustment­s to items on the scanner; a giant safety pin proves a useful tool for manipulati­ng delicate flowers; grasses picked on a walk with her granddaugh­ter add to the jumble of flowers; a blue Geranium x magnificum adds a rare note of colour to a new piece; plants ready for Toril to begin arranging a new image.
Clockwise from top left Anemone seedheads and Rosa ‘Paul’s Himalayan Musk’ on Toril’s desk; Toril carefully arranges heads of Erigeron karvinskia­nus on her scanner; in contrast to the dark background of her final images, Toril begins by arranging her subjects on white paper to clarify the details; Toril makes final adjustment­s to items on the scanner; a giant safety pin proves a useful tool for manipulati­ng delicate flowers; grasses picked on a walk with her granddaugh­ter add to the jumble of flowers; a blue Geranium x magnificum adds a rare note of colour to a new piece; plants ready for Toril to begin arranging a new image.
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 ??  ?? This image Toril at work at her desk surrounded by flora and her eclectic collection of old glass bottles and jars.
Facing page One of Toril’s early experiment­s in printing on to fabric. This monochrome image of Cowparsley 17-3 has now been made into a Roman blind.
This image Toril at work at her desk surrounded by flora and her eclectic collection of old glass bottles and jars. Facing page One of Toril’s early experiment­s in printing on to fabric. This monochrome image of Cowparsley 17-3 has now been made into a Roman blind.
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