ART IN GARDENING
Gardening has always
been in my blood from childhood days encouraged by both my granny and father
who always liked to provide fresh food to feed the family. During my gardening
apprenticeship (five years) I got the chance to learn how to create
great
looking gardens. My first landscape garden was my council house garden in St.
Marys which got sweeping curves in the lawn, roses growing up the walls and
brilliant spring and summer bedding plants. When my career took me to Dudley I
got the chance to start planting trees to the bleak black
country landscape,
then in Darlington it was a new golf course
that needed my attention. Then moving north to Livingston New Town I started
bulb planting by the thousand along highways and in urban housing estates.
Sophie watering geraniums |
Cape Gooseberry |
Summer Colour |
Creating beauty in
garden landscapes from my small house garden to the larger outdoor landscapes
was a big part of my life. However we all need a hobby and drawing and painting
gave me the chance to extend my creative skills in other areas.
The principles of
artistic beauty are the same for both creating an attractive garden or a
painting. We look at shapes, colour, contrasts, composition, focal points,
texture and fashion. My hobby of painting helped me to relax as I entered a
different world away from every day pressures, then after submitting
paintings
to my first exhibition in Darlington, I got my first red dot (the mark for a
sold painting) and my life changed. My casual hobby of painting took on a more
serious role and I started to paint at every spare moment. I saw beauty all
around me from Scottish towns, villages, flowers, snow scenes and figures.
However my garden activities provided me with a great source of subjects ready
to capture on canvas. At first it was red poppies growing in huge fields near
Herriot Watt University captured on two canvases. They were very popular so I
used the images to publish as prints. These were added to with my Fuchsia
Swingtime and my favourite roses in a bowl, but as a proud Dundonian I had to
paint the town as there were so many places I admired. The daffodils around
Magdalen Green Bandstand were perfect for a large canvas in oil.
Cottage in Rait |
The Market |
Artists tend to work
in projects so one idea for a painting of an orchid left me with the problem,
do I paint that lovely white Phalaenopsis, the red Cattleya Saturn or the
golden Cymbidium. Problem solved I decided to paint all of them plus several
more that caught my eye.
Ideas in the
gardening world were also demanding attention when I tasted some Saskatoon
berries on a holiday in Canada. No-one in the UK was growing them so I got some
seed and before long I had about twenty small plants. I needed an allotment to
plant them in, so visited City Road and got the perfect plot. This opened up
another place of interest for paintings as it turned out to be a poppy
paradise. Ramshackle sheds, quaint steps, dilapidated fences and floral patios
to relax on were all screaming to be captured on canvas. Arthurs plot got
painted three times, then there was the leaning apple tree, some gorgeous hollyhocks
against a blue fence and a plot smothered in Californian poppies. It turned out
to be the perfect spot for an outdoor art workshop, though one lady seeking my
help asked me to hold a poppy still while she
painted it, as it was blowing in
the wind.
Waiting Patiently |
Still life paintings
needed some good cape gooseberries, grapes and peppers from the greenhouse and
raspberries from the plot, but spring flowers left me spoilt for choice from
snowdrops pushing above the snow, Iceland poppies and flag Iris to daffodils and
tulips.
Even in a figure
study, “Waiting Patiently” I had to add a cracking red
Amaryllis to the
background.
Wee jobs to do this week
Pruning grape vine Brant |
END