Landscape Architecture Australia

Five seasons: The gardens of Piet Oudolf

- Text Claire Martin

Exploring a recent film on the work of the notable Dutch garden designer. Review by Claire Martin.

The 2017 documentar­y Five Seasons:

The Gardens of Piet Oudolf by filmmaker Thomas Piper (co-director of Diller

Scofidio and Renfro: Reimaginin­g Lincoln Center and the High Line) is both opulent and modest. The documentar­y features interviews with landscape luminaries and benefactor­s including British garden designer Noel Kingsbury, James Corner and Lisa Switkin of Field Operations, landscape photograph­er Rick Darke and two of Swiss gallery Hauser and Wirth’s founders, Iwan and Manuela Wirth.

There is a poignancy to this film. Its slowness, observatio­n and immersion are in stark contrast to a world obsessed with speed, instant gratificat­ion, planned obsolescen­ce and digitally mediated experience. It is a movie with sumptuous colours and attention to detail – a firstperso­n account of a man’s passion and purpose that conveys his generosity of spirit, sense of humour, humility and confidence. In this film, with equal parts catharsis and exegesis, time is a protagonis­t.

The film starts with Piet Oudolf at his desk, the scratch of his pen, childhood reminiscen­ces, time-lapse footage of Oudolf’s wife Anja (“the big force behind [him]”) and their private garden and home in the Netherland­s, Hummelo. It’s a cyclical narrative from autumn to autumn that charts the designer’s success across North America and Europe, from Battery Park, the Lurie Garden and the High Line to Hauser and Wirth’s Durslade Farm in the UK. There’s a fondness and familiarit­y to the telling of Oudolf’s story – how he “met plants,” the fact that there was “something he needed and he found it.” It is a story less often told, one of process and complexity filtered through an atmosphere of fragility.

Five Seasons is a simple, elegant film that conveys Oudolf’s passion for plants and the importance of finding something you love and of making the most of the time we all have. There are a number of references to his own mortality and age: “I won’t come back, [but] they [the perennial plantings] will.” When asked if his work is political, Oudolf says, “Will [my work] save the world? I don’t know, but it saves me.”

Oudolf draws our attention to the power of plants and what they can do. We’re invited into the landscape to live, love and laugh – to “load up with beauty to put into [our] work, like loading up your batteries.” He deliberate­ly moved away from decorative planting to focus on ambience, seasonalit­y and spontaneit­y – on what plants do, rather than what they look like. Rick Darke – designer, photograph­er and a long-time collaborat­or of Oudolf’s – describes how the Dutch designer’s work “teaches people to see things they were unable to see.”

At the start of the film, Oudolf’s local shopkeeper asks if he is being followed by the camera crew, to which he responds, “No, I am leading [them].” And Oudolf has led, but dismisses references to the Dutch or New Perennial Movement. He designs what he likes. “If I like it, everyone will like it.” We are taken on a journey through his process, through trusted planting palettes and applicatio­ns of hierarchy and mathematic­s. We see how he moves beyond the plan and puts himself on the ground at eye level.

It was as a child that Oudolf learned to observe and there are several scenes in which he is shown photograph­ing his work, where he is the subject of our gaze and the landscape the subject of his. “[He] put[s] plants on stage and let[s] them perform.” Looking out over the Lurie Garden in Chicago, he recalls that “Fifteen years ago it was a parking deck … [it was my] first attempt to do a purely natural looking planting design [that] I couldn’t control, only conduct.” That marked the start of “new ideas” – “Lurie inspired the whole narrative of the High Line.”

Piper has directed a beautifull­y paced film that balances highly evocative scenes with thoughtful reflection. There is a richness to the cinematogr­aphy that does justice to Oudolf’s compositio­ns. The film’s aesthetic is as distinctiv­e as the swathes of plants he leads us through; busying bees, drifting seeds, vibrating colours and textures fill the screen.

Standing in front of his “masterpiec­e” at Durslade Farm, Oudolf is described as

“one of the great magicians.” But what this film perhaps best describes is his virtuosity – how he plans wildness. There is a universali­ty to this film that will resonate whether you have experience­d Oudolf’s landscapes directly, through books or not at all, because landscapes are our most primordial memories. Comforted by Oudolf’s thought and care, it was hard not to leave the screening with a sense that time had slowed.

 ?? Photo: courtesy ACMI ?? 01 01The garden designed by Piet Oudolf at the Hauser and Wirth gallery in Somerset, UK includes a large perennial meadow at the rear of the main building.
Photo: courtesy ACMI 01 01The garden designed by Piet Oudolf at the Hauser and Wirth gallery in Somerset, UK includes a large perennial meadow at the rear of the main building.
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