Why So special? Iconic C20 Landscapes - Shute House
Event Information
About this event
FOLAR and The Gardens Trust are delighted to present a series of weekly online talks reviewing the 21 recently registered Historic England post war landscapes and gardens and their designers.
[To see details of this particular talk please scroll down beyond the listings]
The purpose of the series is to focus attention on the ideas, ingenuity and quality of each of these C20 designs. With a brilliant array of speakers including the original designers, academics, historians and researchers plus further insights from head gardeners, residents, site managers and users, we aim to reveal more detail about the design, the designer, how the landscape/garden works, how it has endured over the years, and what its future is like even with Historic England (HE) listing. We also want to discuss availability and access to drawings and papers related to the projects.
These landscapes and gardens range from private gardens to vast reclamation projects. Throughout the UK many C20 designed gardens and landscapes are at great risk from being unnoticed or under-valued, or they are maintained without any awareness of the original concept, such that sites get swept away, ‘improved’ or built over. We hope that this series of talks will help to change this.
The full series runs from 7 September 2021 to 29 March 2022, grouped by subject and with a week’s break between topics. [and nothing in December] All talks are on Tuesdays from 18.00-19.15.
This ticket is for this individual talk and costs £5, and you may purchase tickets for other individual talks via the links below, or you may purchase a ticket for this particular part of the series for £25.50 which focuses on Private Housing & Gardens and runs from 15 February to 29 March here.
Due to a recent Apple decision to charge a 30% fee for paid online events unfortunately you may no longer be able to purchase this ticket from the Eventbrite iOS app. Please use a web browser on desktop or mobile to purchase, or follow the link here.
FOLAR members can buy tickets for this topic at £18, other topics or for individual talks at the reduced prices. Please note that Landscape Institute members are not automatically members of FOLAR.
For a detailed description of each talk please click on the individual ticket for more information (which will be updated with information when available). FOLAR members can access their ticket prices at checkout.
To join FOLAR (Individual membership subscription - £20 per annum) go to www.folar.uk/support-us.
Attendees will be sent a Zoom link 2 days prior to the start of the talk, and again a few hours before the talk. A link to the recorded session (available for 1 week) will be sent shortly afterwards.
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New Town Parks
Week 1: 7 September. Harlow Town Park with David Allen and Alison Fox. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 2: 14 September. Campbell Park Milton Keynes with Neil Higson and Brian Salter. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Commercial Landscapes
Week 3: 28 September. Stockley Park with Bernard Ede and Claire Watson. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 4: 5 October. Broadwater Park with Karen Fitzsimon. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 5: 12 October. Cummins Engine Factory with Jane Amidon and Matthew Benians. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 6: 19 October. Cadbury Factory with Ed Bennis and Rob Belcher. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Public Housing
Week 7: 2 November. Alexandra Road Park with Neil Davidson. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 8: 9 November. Brunel Estate with Colin Moore. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 9: 16 November. Golden Lane Estate with Elain Harwood and Clem Cecil. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 10: 23 November. Churchill Gardens with Dominic Cole and Jennifer White. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 11: 30 November. Alton East and West with Elain Harwood. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Semi-Public Gardens
Week 12: 11 January. Improvement Garden Stockwood Park with Kate Harwood. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 13: 18 January. Roper’s Garden with Ed Bennis. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 14: 25 January. Kennedy Memorial with Annabel Downs and Annie Thomas. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 15: 1 February. St Catherine’s College with Tim Richardson. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Private Housing
Week 16: 15 February. Fieldend with Jan Woudstra and James Strike. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 17: 22 February. Burwood Place Water Gardens with Dominic Cole, Jan Woudstra and Cristina Refolo. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Private Gardens
Week 18: 8 March. Beth Chatto’s Garden with David Ward and Chris Gibson. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 19: 15 March. Denmans Garden with Barbara Simms and Gwendolyn van Paasschen. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 20: 22 March. York Gate Garden with Ben Preston. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 21: 29 March. Shute House with Kate Felus. Part of a series of 21 online lectures, £5 each.
Week 21. 29 Mar: Shute House
The garden of Shute House on the Wiltshire / Dorset border is one of the best known of Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe’s private commissions and regarded by many as his finest work. He worked there for almost 25 years. The garden is divided into a series of spaces, but water is the defining element. Fundamental to the design was the splitting of the water into two separate courses of contrasting characters, one formal and one more natural.The garden is renowned because of its designer, but it was truly a collaboration with his clients. Michael and Anne Tree shaped the original design more than has been previously acknowledged and this talk focuses on Anne Tree’s contribution in particular.
Dr Kate Feluś is a historian specialising in gardens and their social history. For over twenty years she has been a consultant researching and advising on the restoration of historic and C20 parks and gardens, for both public and private owners. Her book The Secret Life of the Georgian Garden, (2016) explains how the Georgians lived in the great landscapes of Capability Brown and others, enjoying banquets, boating and amorous liaisons in the shrubberies. The Times declared it to be ‘a pioneering work and an important addition to the literature of the country house. More than that it is a thoroughly entertaining read. ‘Kate is currently writing a book for Yale University Press about the remarkable women who’ve created British gardens through history and the great garden designers they joined forces with.
Image: ©Historic England