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How to make your garden go pop with art

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YOU couldn’t fail to notice designer John McPherson’s ‘in your face’ Pop Street Garden in the new container garden category at this year’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show, which by his own admission should be a place to party or at least to ‘pre’ before going out on the town.

You too could create bright, bold and playful pots, featuring a cornucopia of bubble gum pink, hot orange and electric blue planters, interspers­ed with containers painted with pop art classics, from comic strip cartoon captions to Campbell’s tomato soup cans.

Canadian McPherson, a former dancer who began studying horticultu­re and design three years ago, created a space to jump-start the transition from ‘lockdown to on-the-town’.

“During lockdown we spent so much time at home and I wanted to have things around me that reminded me that there are better times to come,” he explains.

“We’ve been working from home for the last two years. We can have friends over now, we can have drinks and we can go out.”

He agrees that a pop art style of garden may not be the most calming, serene outdoor space to return to after a day at work but argues: “When you come home to relax you can go in the neighbour’s garden! I’m a huge fan of bright colours. They fill me with energy and joy – they just cheer you up.” Here, he offers tips on how to give add some pop art pizzazz.

CREATE BOXES FROM MDF

‘Brill’ boxes – featuring pop art in reds, blues and whites – in his show garden can be made from MDF and then painted with acrylic paints and then varnished. Bag some powder coated containers

“A lot of these are available commercial­ly, so they are easily accessible and not expensive. You can get them in bright colours including yellow, acid green and pink and they come in different sizes and may be cheaper than buying large ceramic containers. Make sure you put in holes for drainage.”

USE COLOURED GRAVEL

“I used aquarium gravel for the show containers,” he says. “I thought, if it doesn’t kill the fish, it’s not going to kill my plants!”

BE IMAGINATIV­E WITH PLANTING

“The beauty of a container garden is that you can have two plants which need different conditions in the same container, by planting each individual plant in its pot in the container and then covering the surface with soil and gravel.

“For example, you could have Colocasia esculenta ‘Burgundy Stem’ paired with an Agave filifera, which needs sandy, gritty soil, so it’s in its own container. The colocasia needs a different soil type, so it can go in its own container within the main container.”

TAKE INSPIRATIO­N FROM POP ART ICONS

“I’m a huge fan of pop art – I was a student in New York in the 1980s, watching that scene. Some of my favourite artists are Keith Haring, Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenste­in.

I love art that is really bright, graphic and colourful.”

USE MASONRY PAINT

If you are thinking of creating your own pop art mural in your outdoor space, you’ll need exterior masonry paints, or you can use outdoor acrylics to decorate pots and sculptures, McPherson suggests.

ARE THERE POP ART RULES?

“Well, we are all part of the consumer culture – anything can be art if you say it’s art. It’s your space reflecting your tastes. I have used famous pop art homages to Roy Lichtenste­in – he did a comic book style – and Andy Warhol’s famous Campbell’s Soup Tin.”

CAN YOU HAVE TOO MUCH COLOUR?

“Some people worry that it might be too bold, too brash, it’s not tasteful. But tasteful is a word I don’t understand. Like Marie Kondo (the Japanese organising consultant) said, ‘If it brings you joy, keep it’.”

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