Daily Mail

Naughticul­tural!

Chelsea Flower Show gets an erotic makeover

- By Colin Fernandez Environmen­t Correspond­ent

AS a bastion of tradition, the Chelsea Flower Show has few peers.

It’s an annual fixture for the Royal Family, and showcases Britain’s finest horticultu­re to almost 160,000 visitors from all over the world.

But if you go down to its beds and plots this year, be sure of a big surprise – in the shape of a garden based on female genitalia.

Branded vulgar and pathetic by critics – not least for its euphemisti­c name, The Lady Garden – it is meant to be a feminist space, with plants and sculptures echoing ‘the curves of the female form’.

The display, which is sponsored by the Body Shop, will also feature a 6ft 7in iris sculpture inspired by the erotic floral paintings by the artist Georgia O’Keeffe. US botanist Jennifer Hirsch says her garden design will highlight ‘what makes women different from men’, challenge ‘ social taboos’ and champion ‘feminist values’.

But detractors claim it is sexist and lowers the tone of the Royal Horticultu­ral Society event, which runs from May 19 to 23. Professor Stefan Buczacki, the former chairman of Gardeners’ Question Time on Radio 4, said: ‘If this is the best they can do at the world’s finest horticultu­ral show, I think it is pretty pathetic.

‘Call me old-fashioned but I know the difference between men and women. I don’t need a genitalia garden to demonstrat­e it.

‘I am a huge admirer of women and largely prefer their company to men. But if I were a woman I would be offended by this.

‘It is pretty sexist. They don’t need a Chelsea garden to tell them they are unique and I don’t suppose there is going to be a male equivalent with a giant phallic symbol next door.

‘Chelsea should be about gardens, not offending, shocking or empowering people by trying to get a message across.’

Miss Hirsch has planted the garden with species used in herbal medicine for women’s reproducti­ve health to ‘help reshape conversati­on and perspectiv­es’. She said: ‘The garden’s name is cheeky, but The Body Shop has always been irreverent.

‘The whole plan was to be more audacious than the RHS would be comfortabl­e with. For Chelsea, the idea that a garden can be a tool for a relatively political or social conversati­on is an unusual one.

‘But that is The Body Shop all over, wanting to disrupt the norm. I was not sure that the RHS would go for it, but it has been enthusiast­ic and supportive. The garden is a conversati­on around... the uniqueness of women.’

The Body Shop is exhibiting at the show for the first time. At the end of the event, the garden will be transplant­ed to its HQ in Littlehamp­ton, West Sussex.

Linda Campbell, the firm’s managing director, said: ‘The Body Shop has always been proud to ignite conversati­on and drive action for positive social change.

‘We hope this garden, which celebrates our feminist founding principles, will provide a beautiful and thought-provoking space in which we can further open up the dialogue surroundin­g female health and empowermen­t.’

‘I think it is pretty pathetic’

 ??  ?? Feminist tract: Part of the garden
Feminist tract: Part of the garden

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