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Derek Jarman: modern nature, far horizons

The garden and art of Prospect Cottage, on shingle next to a nuclear power station, is celebrated in a new show. By Christophe­r Woodward

- The exhibition Derek Jarman: My garden’s boundaries are the horizon opens today at the Garden Museum, London, until Sept 20. For further informatio­n, visit gardenmuse­um.org

David Austin on roses. Gertrude Jekyll on colour. Reginald Blomfield on the English formal garden. Culpeper on herbs. The garden books I’m unpacking might be the favourites of my Aunt Rosemary, the parish council chairman of her village in Suffolk. But open the books and they are signed: “Derek Jarman, Prospect Cottage.”

Jarman died 26 years ago this year, and his books, drawings, tools and paintings go on display in an exhibition that opens at the Garden Museum today. Jarman’s work was an assault on the establishm­ent. Films such as The Last of England (1987) presented Mrs Thatcher’s England as a fascist, derelict state; as an outspoken activist for gay rights he criticised Ian McKellen as too chummy with the Establishm­ent; Jarman was also one of the first celebritie­s to speak publicly about having Aids.

Watch Jordan’s Dance, restored by the Luma Foundation and now on the website of Manchester Art Gallery as it prepares to open its postponed exhibition “Protest!” Jordan, the original punk – whom Jarman met at Victoria station and who, he said, gave the Sex Pistols their style – dances in a white tutu around a bonfire of burning books in Deptford. How did a man with such a heat of anger come to give Beth Chatto tips on gravel gardening?

Jarman was a very English radical. He wished to be buried in an ancient and picturesqu­e church in Romney Marsh, but prayed to God to be “reincarnat­ed as queer”, the words carved into one of the “black paintings” on the bedroom wall of Prospect Cottage. Life and death came together in this house and garden he made on Dungeness, recently rescued for the nation almost as Jarman left it, by The Art Fund, Tate, and Creative Folkestone with a £3.5million campaign.

Jarman bought the five-room, gardenless cottage for £32,000 in 1986, using the inheritanc­e from his father. At 44, this was the first home he owned. And on December 22 1986 he’d been diagnosed HIV-positive. “I bought the cottage as a joke,” he told Anna Pavord, who wrote about his garden for the Independen­t on Sunday. “It was just such a weird place, a sort of wasteland with that great nuclear power station.” But only half a joke. The Dungeness B reactor sent alarming plumes of smoke into the night, and added an environmen­tal anger to his art. And this was his first, and last, chance to make a garden.

Jarman had imagined gardens all his life – in film, in stage design, and in poetry – and they formed his earliest memories. At the age of three, in 1945, along with his mother and sister, he’d joined his father in Italy – a man who had flown Wellington bombers over

Germany, and become a senior air commander. The family lived in a villa on Lake Maggiore; ripe, abandoned roses and camellias tumbled on lakeside terraces. A fourth birthday present from his parents was an old copy of Beautiful Flowers and How to Grow Them (the illustrati­ons would later inspire costumes for a ballet). At boarding school, at Canford, Dorset, he won a prize for his flower plot; at Northwood, the family home in suburban Middlesex, he made a rockery. The photos show its contrast to the garden of his father who, now a City commuter, and as upright as a rolled umbrella, was the type who sees a garden as one more front in life’s battle against disorder.

The young Jarman was drawn to a neighbour with a wild, less convention­al garden that he depicted in a charcoal drawing, now on show for the first time in the exhibition. She gave the young artist a money plant or Chinese jade: “It’s travelled everywhere,” he laughs in an Arena documentar­y of 1991. “It’s seen everything. If this plant could talk, you wouldn’t need me.”

During the 1970s and 80s he – and the money plant – lived in a succession of squats in the warehouses facing St Paul’s Cathedral on the south bank (now Terence Conran’s Butler’s Wharf). In one, he slept inside a greenhouse. He designed gardens for opera (Don Giovanni to inaugurate the ENO at the Coliseum in 1968) and for film (Ken Russell’s The Devils, 1971), and for his sister when she bought a country house in Herefordsh­ire. These gardens are exercises in formal topiary, in the spirit of David Hicks and also Sir Roy Strong’s The Laskett Gardens.

Jarman’s heart was always in the Elizabetha­n Age. He loved magic, and he loved making his own Court, ruled by charm. When he recorded Shakespear­e’s sonnets for The Angelic Conversati­on (1985) “he knew exactly which garden

he wanted to film in”, recalls his film producer and collaborat­or James Mackay. “Montacute. We snuck in just after the National Trust volunteers opened up.” En route they stopped at the Tudor manor of Curry Mallet, Somerset, where the Jarman family had been billeted after returning from Italy. The red valerian in the cracks of its old brownstone walls evoked schoolboy memories.

The first dawn after receiving his diagnosis of Aids – then, of course, a death sentence – Jarman confided in his diary: “We must fight the fears that threaten our garden… ours is the garden of Will Shakespear­e’s sonnets, of Marlowe, Catullus, of Plato and Wilde, all those who have worked and suffered to keep it watered.” To Jarman, a garden was the secret place of dreams and desires, uncompromi­sed by the weather in the streets.

But Prospect Cottage is not a stage set, or a plant pot. It was a reality. As Pavord wrote: “You could scarcely find a crazier place.” Not a tree grew in the dry, wind-rustled stones. Jarman describes its making in Modern Nature, read last year on Radio 4 by Rupert Everett (among the most poetic writing on flowers of modern times).

At Rassells, the nursery in Kensington, a friend on the till laughed as Jarman loaded up with a dozen favourite varieties of roses, including Rosa mundi from the medieval poem Le Roman de la Rose. According to his partner Keith Collins (famous for his beauty, and how long he could spend in the bath), Jarman first imagined the tarblack Cottage embowered in roses and himself, Jarman, as the handsome prince hacking his way through.

All but three of the roses died in that wind, salt, dryness, and the heat of summer. Native plants flourished, such as sea kale and yellow-horned poppy. But irises were an unexpected success. And what I find most inspiring is that Jarman was determined to override Nature, even if it required embedding mulch, and putting back the pristine shingle afterwards. “Every flower is a triumph,” he told Pavord.

In 1991 Howard Sooley, the photograph­er, came to shoot the garden; he began to help out. The work he has made since – together with Edwin Smith on Rousham, and Andrew Lawson on Hidcote – is one of the great photograph­ic portraits of a garden. In his final year Sooley would collect Jarman from the Aids ward at Bartholome­w’s and drive via Elizabeth Strangman’s plant nursery at Washfeld (where she was then assisted by Graham Gough, now Marchants Plants at Lewes), and Lydd where Liam Mackenzie had a nursery in his mother’s back garden (now Madrona Nursery, Ashford). Jarman would take off his hospital clothes, and change in to a Moroccan djellaba. The tools in the exhibition he bought at an antique shop in Appledore, close to Rye, as weathered and worn as the flotsam from which he made sculptures. “I should have been a gardener,” he told Pavord. “Gardening is much better than filming.”

To Jarman, to be a gardener was not to escape from the world but, rather, to suggest how the world might be. At Prospect Cottage he was abetted by the very practical fact that, being on a nature reserve, it was forbidden to put up fences. (As Tim Richardson has noted, it is the only major garden in Britain with no form of boundary.) But this fits with Jarman’s concept of a garden as not just a private retreat but also a public statement of a view of the world as free, tolerant and wild. And of life – and death – as a great adventure.

On my last visit, the cottage was circled by Italian collectors in fur coats. An American curator’s voice rang across the gravel, talking of “assemblage­s”, and of art fairs in Miami and Basle. It was as if Prospect Cottage could be picked up and put in a collector’s pocket, sealed forever in the timeless, placeless world of internatio­nal art discourse.

But Jarman’s garden will always elude the polished containmen­t of the art world. It’s too sexy, too mischievou­s, too much an obstinate horticultu­ral experiment. (“Peonies are impossible,” finished Pavord. “That is his only regret.”) And all that love and mulch have changed Dungeness: what was once a desert now needs weeding.

The cottage is most itself when a team of garden volunteers rattle Jarman’s old watering cans and sweat in the same sun. Can a garden be a work of art?

No. A garden is much more important than that.

What was once a desert now needs weeding: all that love and mulch have changed Dungeness

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 ??  ?? An old boat on the shore at Dungeness Derek Jarman; detail of Prospect Cottage, right; and a flotsam sculpture, c. 1990, far right
An old boat on the shore at Dungeness Derek Jarman; detail of Prospect Cottage, right; and a flotsam sculpture, c. 1990, far right
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 ??  ?? Prospect Cottage in the early 1990s, by Howard Sooley Poppies, scabious, valerian on shingle
Prospect Cottage in the early 1990s, by Howard Sooley Poppies, scabious, valerian on shingle

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