Baltimore Sun Sunday

Living walls best left to pros, ex-presidents

- By Adrian Higgins

When you view a lifesize portrait of some notable person, your gaze tends to go first to the subject’s face and then to the pose of the body and finally to the background.

The newly unveiled oil painting of former President Barack Obama messes with this visual sequence. The visitors who have been lining up at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington to see the artwork by Kehinde Wiley are gripped by a strange and compelling element — a backdrop of vegetation that seems to embrace Obama and the antique Federal chair on which he sits.

The flowers on the canvas bring their own message, some of them disembodie­d from their plants. The Arabian jasmine recalls the garden plants of Obama’s native Hawaii; the chrysanthe­mum is the official flower of Chicago; and the African lily, or agapanthus, an allusion to his Kenyan forebears. The cascade of foliage appears to belong to the jasmine. It would have been nice to have seen something of Obama’s Irish ancestry —

perhaps? Whatever the symbolism, there is something magical about a wall of lush vegetation — whether unexpected on a canvas or cosseting in a garden. A vertical, living tapestry has the power to clear the mind, lower the blood pressure and transport you to a place of delight. Achieving that ideal, like painting a portrait, is a lot harder than it may appear.

The desire to clothe buildings, fences, walls or any vertical plane with plants is a long-held ambition of gardeners and goes back at least to the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. Such effects hide ugly or dull surfaces with charming beauty. For gardeners in tight spaces, the vegetated wall retrieves a barren area and promises an effective screen.

Traditiona­lly, the way to do this is to plant a vine in the ground and let it climb up a wall or fence. The difficulty is that many vigorous climbers — desired for full and rapid coverage — have turned out to be ravening weeds. These include English ivy, Asian wisteria, porcelain berry and five-leaf akebia. Even if you find a vigorous vine that isn’t invasive, keeping it pruned, trained and generally groomed takes you into the realm of the hobby gardener. This neediness extends to rambling roses, by the way.

In recent years, another type of vegetative art has emerged, called living walls or green walls. They rely on pockets to hold the roots. The best are extremely photogenic and have thus infiltrate­d social media. This makes them coveted by folks who have little idea, I suspect, of how expensive and demanding they can be.

In spite of this, the best are truly amazing. One of the champions of this horticultu­ral art form is the French designer Patrick Blanc, whose commission­s include the side of a fivestory building in Paris transforme­d from bare stucco to a vertical jungle named L’Oasis d’Aboukir.

Many living walls are constructe­d either in balmy places such as Florida or indoors, allowing the use of tropical plants, including some of the leafier houseplant­s.

Building one outdoors in a temperate climate forces the use of hardy plants. In his Paris project, Blanc used not just hardy perennials but also a few shrubs. The palette includes bergenias, pinks, cranesbill, hypericum, liriope, hostas, fatsia, and even nandina and yucca.

Such vertical gardens require expertly engineered systems of support and ways of delivering water and nutrients. They also require large quantities of plants.

“I don’t think it’s a do-ityourself sort of thing,” said Ed Snodgrass, a grower of green-roof plants in Street, Md. “You have to be pretty slick to take on a do-ityourself pocket wall, with all the systems it requires.”

The curtain of vegetation veils its workings: Custom armature, a hive of planting cells, a computeriz­ed irrigation system and supplement­al lighting. Many skip the soil — the plants grow in synthetic felt or the like and are watered and fed hydroponic­ally.

If you want a sense of the challenges and rewards of the vertical garden, consider the Green Wall at Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square, Pa. It was the largest living wall in the United States when it was built in 2010, and it is used to decorate a curving corridor of individual restrooms. The garden consists of two walls — they face each other — and each is 13 feet high and 360 feet long.

The wall is a beguiling compositio­n of 33,000 plants in contrastin­g textures and shades of greens. By using mostly ferns, flowering is kept to a bare minimum. It’s designed as a break from the floral extravagan­za in the East Conservato­ry. “It’s the sorbet in a great meal,” said its gardener, Lauren Jenkins. “This space is a respite.”

For the viewer that is, not Jenkins. With her team of four volunteers, she is continuall­y grooming and trimming and making sure that the plants are happy. At this time of year, they are watered once a day and fed twice a week with irrigation tubes, but the plants nearer the glass roof are warmer, thirstier and watered longer.

Companies have emerged to cater to this market. Employers see value in living walls as ways of beautifyin­g office lobbies and bestowing tranquilit­y in an otherwise harried environmen­t.

Michael Furbish, of Furbish in Baltimore, has installed approximat­ely 40 living walls over the past eight years. “We have a lot of people who see our walls in commercial applicatio­ns and say, ‘What if I want one, 2 feet by 2 feet, or 3 by 3, in my kitchen. Can I do that?’ ” But scaling down doesn’t negate the need for custom installati­on, sophistica­ted irrigation and other systems, so “it becomes prohibitiv­ely expensive,” he said.

He is developing a more simple setup that he hopes to market later this year.

Meanwhile, you can get your living wall fix by visiting the National Portrait Gallery. Photos don’t do justice to Obama’s portrait or the mesmerizin­g vitality of the surroundin­g verdure.

 ?? YANN MONEL PHOTO ?? French designer Patrick Blanc transforme­d the side of a five-story building in Paris from bare stucco to a vertical jungle named L’Oasis d’Aboukir.
YANN MONEL PHOTO French designer Patrick Blanc transforme­d the side of a five-story building in Paris from bare stucco to a vertical jungle named L’Oasis d’Aboukir.
 ?? BECCA MATHIAS PHOTOGRAPH­Y/LONGWOOD GARDENS ?? The Green Wall at Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square, Pa., was the largest living wall in the U.S. when it was built in 2010 and decorates a corridor of individual restrooms.
BECCA MATHIAS PHOTOGRAPH­Y/LONGWOOD GARDENS The Green Wall at Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square, Pa., was the largest living wall in the U.S. when it was built in 2010 and decorates a corridor of individual restrooms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States