Totally Dublin

PLEASURE GARDEN

- words Michael McDermott

Pleasure Garden is a sumptuous, large-format magazine. Stepping away from the practicali­ties of the garden, it places it within a wider cultural context and a place to escape to - a fantasy in a garden, filled with art, music, fashion, society and sex. Editor-in-Chief John Tebbs leads us down

the garden path.

– What is the genesis of Pleasure Garden?

What considerat­ions and processes were taken into account when establishi­ng it? Who is your target audience?

I really wanted to create a publicatio­n that captured the fantasy of the garden – something that reflected the transporti­ve powers that I personally find in a garden. But, I also wanted to connect the garden to its wider cultural contexts – this is something that so often gets lost in most gardening titles. There seems to be a tendency to break things down into very focussed genres and I wanted to pull the garden partially out of that notion. I think when I created Pleasure Garden it was from a personal perspectiv­e of something that I would like to see – something I felt was missing and had a faith that others would also connect with.

– Where did you take inspiratio­n from in the creation of Pleasure Garden?

Pleasure Garden is in a very literal sense inspired by the 18th century pleasure gardens like Vauxhall in London – places that mixed a wide variety of cultural attraction­s in a garden setting. They were fascinatin­g places and for me a great vehicle of ideas.

– How did you go about establishi­ng your team of contributo­rs?

It has happened very organicall­y in a way – through connection­s of people we knew already and approachin­g others we admired. As we have grown, we have attracted others who the magazine appeals to. We have been very lucky to have an incredible cast of contributo­rs thus far.

– While Pleasure Garden may be considered a niche publicatio­n, it is highly aspiration­al in each element of its production from choice of paper to scale and design.

I wanted it to push the boundaries of what people would consider a gardening magazine – the format and materials all play a part in making the vision come to life.

– The magazine is built around themes with the most recent one being a ‘Japanese Dream’. Can you tell us about this?

The first two issues weren’t based on a theme but with the third one we decided to focus the whole issue around the rose – it felt a very interestin­g way to think about something from multiple angles. Since then each issue has had a ‘theme’ but I’m not a fan of that word, it brings to mind something gimmicky. We try to give the theme as broad an approach as possible – it can be very abstract sometimes! After ‘roses’ was ‘trees’ which was a personal favourite – there could be multiple volumes on many of these concepts, you scratch the surface on a subject and it can seem like a never ending rabbit hole of inspiratio­n and potential. ‘Japan’ was our last issue and again we only mined a fraction of the possibilit­ies – but within that we try to keep a cohesion so the stories have a deeper connection rather than them simply being connected by coming from Japan... The issue is called ‘A Japanese Dream’ as much of the issue looks at perception­s of Japan – particular­ly from the Western gaze.

– We came to know Pleasure Garden through the work of Irish photograph­er Linda Brownlee. Can you tell us about your collaborat­ions with her to date?

Linda shot a story for our ‘Romance of the Trees’ issue. She took a road trip through the redwoods of the west coast of the U.S. I was rather jealous as it’s somewhere I would love to visit! Portland-based Zach Dundas wrote a wonderful piece to accompany the images that looked at the human story that is connected to the forests there.

– What is your own favourite pleasure garden?

I’m turned on by a wide variety of gardens – the ones that resonate the most are those with a strong personal narrative. I live not far from Great Dixter and Derek Jarman’s Prospect Cottage, I would say that these are perhaps two of my favourite gardens – and we were lucky enough to feature them both in issue five.

– What advise would you impart to anyone considerin­g establishi­ng their own print publicatio­n?

Hmmmmm! I don’t know! Don’t underestim­ate how hard it is – how many moving parts there are and how financiall­y difficult it is. Sometimes, I think the less you know the better! As long as there is a passion for what you want to achieve – you will find your way.

– Any gardening trends or recommenda­tions for Spring 2020?

I do find trends in gardening rather uncomforta­ble – for me a garden is timeless and personal. A garden evolves and that is something that our obsession with instant-everything fails to recognise. On reflection I think this is very much a foundation of Pleasure Garden too.

– Any spin-off plans for Pleasure Garden?

Any stories of unexpected encounters or correspond­ence over the six issues to date which emboldens your faith in your creation?

Lots of ideas in the pipeline – we have already had some wonderful collaborat­ions and it’s definitely something I want to build on moving forward. Watch this space!

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