Some exhibitions, especially those national museum ‘blockbusters’, are just too unwieldy but the bijou exhibition Fashion and the Garden occupied just over half an hour of my visit the the Garden Museum on Thursday. Just a short walk along the Albert Embankment (opposite The Houses of Parliament) from Westminster Tube Station, the Garden Museum is right next door to Lambeth Palace, the official London residence of the Archbishops of Canterbury. Formerly known as the Museum of Garden History, The Garden Museum is based in the deconsecrated parish church of St Mary-at-Lambeth. I’d met up with my friend Rosanna (the mosaics maker) with whom I had recently been to see The Isabella Blow Show at Somerset House.
Inside the Garden Museum with Rebecca Louise Law Installation
After morning coffee in the Museum Cafe (we couldn’t resist a tiny home-cooked apple tart as well – all the food served looked very acceptable!) we headed under Rebecca Louise Law’s installation ‘The Flower Garden Display’d’ for the Fashion and the Garden exhibit that I had read about recently in the press.
The Accompanying Booklet
Put together by Nicola Shulman, sister of British Vogue editor-in-chief Alexandra Shulman, the displays cover fashion and garden connections between the 17th and 21st centuries.
This portrait of Lettice Newdigate (1608) by an unknown artist is the first known example of a Knot Garden in art.
Influences of gardens on fashion extend over time from knot gardens reproduced through embroidery on clothing to Philip Treacy hats such as the Orchid.
Philip Treacy Orchid Hat
I noted that an interest in flowers is a very English characteristic. They have featured in English clothing designs throughout the centuries where they are absent, for example, in France. There were exquisitely embroidered gloves and pockets; flowers feature in the silk designs of Anna Maria Garthwaite and other 18th century Spitalfields silk weavers; phaeton carriages were built very high so that owners and their families and guests could drive around their landscape parks and show off; and then there are the clothes that we wear when visiting gardens or even when gardening.
It’s a small show but perfectly formed.
We had time to visit the permanent collection – gnomes; gardening tools from trowels to lawnmowers; rare books; paintings such the recently acquired ‘Portrait of a Black Gardener‘ by Harold Gilman; posters, ephemera and garden seed packet displays.
Yates Seeds. No longer sold in the UK but still available in Australia and New Zealand.
“The Museum’s garden was created in 1980. At its heart is a knot garden designed by the Museum’s President, The Dowager Marchioness of Salisbury (who was then also re-making the gardens at Hatfield House, Hertfordshire). The reason for the seventeenth-century spirit of the design is that our garden also houses the tomb of the great plant-hunters, gardeners and collectors, John Tradescant the Elder (c.1570-1638) and Younger (1608-1662), the rediscovery of which originally inspired the creation of a museum of garden history in the deconsecrated, and then derelict, church of St Mary-at-Lambeth.” From the Garden Museum website.
The Tradescant Tomb
In addition to the tomb and monument to the Tradescants is the tomb of Captain William Bligh of ‘The Bounty’.
Captain Bligh Tomb
I’ve never heard of this museum and will remember to visit – but a few days ago I found and “pinned” the wonderful Gilman painting to my Pinterest “Art” board!
It’s quite a small collection but worth a visit especially if there is an interesting exhibition. Strange coincidence!
One day I will get beyond the shop and cafe…often visited those in my buggy pushing days. The current exhibition looks fascinating.
Not being a gardener those are the two places I would head for really. Somehow I thought the combination of fashion and gardens would appeal to both me and R. Otherwise seeds and lawnmowers pass me by!