Spiralling Skywards – sculpture exhibition at Nymans

June 1, 2011toSeptember 10, 2011

Spiralling Skywards – contemporary sculpture exhibition part of project to revive the arts at Nymans

The exhibition features six highly polished metal contemporary sculptures displayed around the garden and house ruins. The sculptures are inspired by geometry and pattern in the natural world.

Exhibition curator Romily Meredith said: “Spiralling Skywards is the first in a series of art projects planned here at Nymans. They are designed to build on the creative legacy of the extraordinary Messel family who have lived here from 1890 and created one of the most significant flower gardens of the 20th century.”

The Messels were and still are an incredibly creative family. Members of the family have made important contributions to gardening and garden design, stage, costume and film design, interior design, photography and furniture design. Their bold, playful and experimental approach is apparent in the garden at Nymans. In fact Nymans was described by Muriel Messel as a “series of bold experiments”.

Romily continued: “The Messels’ spirit of innovation is still at the heart of what we do at Nymans today. We are already a world leader in the area of green and sustainable gardening, and now we are looking to revive the property’s connections with the arts community.

“We are keen to build relationships with local artists and organisations, and to tap into the enormous creative wealth of experience and audiences that are on our doorstep in London and Brighton.”

People visiting the garden during the exhibition will first encounter, Brighton based artist, Steve Geliot’s ‘Spire’ in the pinetum. Reflecting the gothic architecture of the house, as well as the form of the nearby trees, ‘Spire’ creates a dazzling array of glittering reflections.

Mohammed Qasim Ashfaq’s aluminium ‘Rod’ pierces the lawn at an angle on the far side of the main house, “like a still-quivering thunderbolt hurled into the turf” (Alastair Sooke, The Telegraph).

Two ‘Alliums’ and ‘Seedheads’ by sculptor Ruth Moilliet can be viewed from inside the entrance to the house. These are celebrations of some of the most magnificent sculptural forms in the plant kingdom, resonating with the summer planting of the garden.

Later in the summer Nymans will also host Art in the Garden. Every Friday in August, between 10.30am and 3.30pm, there will be an exciting range of activities, and materials for adults and children, of all ages and levels of experience, to experiment with, and/or borrow to take around the garden at their own leisure. The activities will be accompanied by a variety of artist demonstrations.

www.nationaltrust.org.uk

Shifting Boundaries at The Phoenix Gallery, Brighton

May 14, 2011toJune 12, 2011

Curated by Clare Sheppeard, Shifting Boundaries addresses the themes of art and domestic space, and the relationships between the public and private spheres. Artists include Ben Ashton, Annabelle Dalby, Anne Eggebert, Julian Walker, Caitlin Heffernan, Ingrid Plum,  Dave Stephens and Julia Waugh.

Late openings: 13 – 15 May until 9 pm, 21, 22, 28 May until 7 pm

ASSOCIATED ACTIVITIES:

Performance: Ingrid Plum. Saturday, 14 May, 8 pm, free.

Insight  – Artists’ Residencies: Saturday, 21 May, 5 pm, £5 / £3 conc. www.brightonticketshop.com

Still Life: An Audience with Henrietta Moraes

A performance celebrating the life of Henrietta Moraes, model and muse to Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud and Maggi Hambling, and the uncrowned Queen of the 1950′s Soho set. Written and performed by Sue MacLaine.

Saturday 14th May 3pm, 7pm
Sunday 15th May 12pm, 3pm, 7pm
Saturday 21st May 3pm, 7pm
Sunday 22nd May 12pm, 3pm, 7pm
Saturday 28th May 3pm, 7pm

Tickets £12 (£10) Brighton Dome Box Office, 29 New Road, or visit www.brightonticketshop.com or book by phone 01273 709709.

Still Life and Shifting Boundaries are part of HOUSE Festival 2011: Art and Domestic Space www.housefestival.org

www.phoenixarts.org

The rise of the rose at Borde Hill

June 6, 2011toJune 30, 2011

The rise of the rose – A riot of colour, a delight for the senses at Borde Hill

One of the finest arrays of roses in the South-East comes into its full glory this June, as Borde Hill Garden in West Sussex celebrates a season of heady fragrances, enchanting walks through beautifully scented displays. The spectrum of colour, from soft pinks to deep crimson, intermingled with the heady fragrances of old English roses, marks a glorious celebration of the best-loved of all garden flowers.

Head gardener Andy Stevens and his team have enhanced the unique style and atmosphere of the formal garden at Borde Hill – one of the Great Gardens of Sussex – which consists of a series of distinctive linked ‘rooms’.

Jay Robin’s Rose Garden, designed by RHS gold medallist Robin Williams and planted in 1996, boasts a lavish display of some 100 varieties of David Austin roses. The Rose Garden comprises a number of formal beds bordered by box hedges amid softly curving paths and walks. Reflecting the original style of the 1902 plantings are blue cast iron trellis poles decked with clematis swags leading to an archway into the Mediterranean Garden and beyond. Delphinium, peonies and phlox are also used to great visual effect, complimenting the star turn, the roses.

During Roses in Bloom, selected rooms in Borde Hill House, decorated with flowers by Cottage Flowers of Cuckfield, are open from 12 to 30 June for pre-booked groups (Monday to Friday except 12 June). Here’s a rare opportunity to visit the significant Heritage House, of which the oldest wing dates back to 1590. House tours will start at 11am and 2pm for groups and need to be pre-booked and paid prior to the event. (They are £3.50 per person in addition to the garden entrance fee).

Jeremy’s Restaurant at Borde Hill, will feature a “Summer Garden” menu of the day with a rose sorbet, to coincide with Borde Hill Garden’s Roses in Bloom.

Jeremy’s Restaurant will be offering their mid-week Summer Garden menu-of-the-day from the 6th to 30th June. Two-courses at £15 per person and 3-courses at £18 person. “A glass of beautiful, chilled rose from Provence makes a perfect accompaniment,” adds Jeremy Ashpool.

Café Elvira also will be serving special home cooked food during this time.

Season tickets are also available.

Borde Hill Garden is located near Haywards Heath in West Sussex and admission is priced at £8.00 per adult; £7.00 for concessions and £4.75 per child. Pathways throughout the formal garden provide easy access for wheelchairs and pushchairs. Dogs on a lead are welcome.

www.bordehill.co.uk

Sponsored by David Austin Roses and Cottage Flowers of Cuckfield

www.davidaustinroses.com




“Summer of Art” Exhibition at the Zimmer Stewart Gallery

June 4, 2011toAugust 6, 2011
June 4, 2011toAugust 6, 2011

This Summer at the Zimmer Stewart Gallery you will find a wide range of work by new, emerging and established artists from Sussex and the South East of England.

Their mixed “Summer of Art” Exhibition, starting in June, will show paintings by Katharine Le Hardy, Nick Bodimeade, Phil Tyler; Original prints by Gary Goodman, Patrick Caulfield, Terry Frost; Ceramics by John Leach, Karen Bunting, Nigel Lambert and Sculpture by Giles Penny and Christopher Marvell.

It will be a wonderful mix of work and mediums to suit all tastes and budgets, as work sells it will be replaced by new pieces so as the show continues it will evolve and change, so visitors are encouraged to come back again and again during the 8 weeks to see different work.

We will open up the garden as in previous years to show garden sculpture, and visitors are encouraged to see the landscaping by Midhurst garden designer Annie Guilfoyle. Some people return each year just to see how the garden has grown and developed.

James Stewart, Gallery Director, said “The solo shows we have for much of the year give visitors to the gallery a chance to see one artist’s work in depth, but for many people the mixed group shows are more exciting because of the variety of work that can be seen from a number of artists at the same time; it is an opportunity to see how different pieces work alongside each other”


Images:

Wall Plate – screenprint by Patrick Caulfield

Viva Las Vegas – screenprint with silver paint by Patrick Edgeley

Damn This Place II – digitlal and screenprint by Richard Denne

Zimmer Stewart Gallery

A contemporary gallery established in 2003 showing new work by emerging and established artists through an on going programme of eight to ten exhibitions each year. The work on show includes paintings, original prints, ceramics, sculpture and textiles.

Zimmer Stewart Gallery, 29 Tarrant Street, Arundel, West Sussex, BN18 9DG  •  01903 885 867  •  www.zimmerstewart.co.uk

Prints are also available online from our dedicated “ZS Editions” website:  www.zseditions.co.uk

Borde Hill

March 21, 2011 10:00 amtoSeptember 11, 2011 6:00 pm
October 22, 2011 10:00 amtoOctober 30, 2011 6:00 pm

The renowned garden of delights that is Borde Hill is promising a packed calendar of events and unforgettable memories for its 2011 season. The acclaimed venue offers outdoor splendours for all ages and interests, from gardener enthusiasts to music and car lovers and every member of the family.
Throwing open its doors to visitors on Monday 21 March, Borde Hill is this year sporting an impressive new entrance, complete with expanded gift shop and plant sales area.

Offering a gift for every occasion, the shop is packed with everything from local produce such as Paynes Sussex honey to quality items such as Ideal Home china mugs, Ulster Weavers kitchen co-ordinates, superb Madaraff handbags, Bradleys Tannery leather gardening accessories, Padblocks magnetic writing pads and blocks and Elite fairy gifts and novelty childrens’ toys.

The newly enhanced Italian Garden will create a fresh focus to complement the delightful Rose Garden, created by RHS gold medallist Robin Williams in 1996. Also this year  a new Rose Border has been designed by Dr Tony Lord to extent the summer colour and interest. No fewer than 4,000 narcissus, tulip (hybrid and species) anemones, scillas, hyacinth bulbs have been planted to create still more vivid colour over the season. The magnificent examples of camellias, rhododendrons and azaleas are a certain draw for garden lovers, as is the unique collection of magnolias that Borde Hill has nurtured over the decades.

Linger in the Grade 11* listed landscape that embraces 17 acres of formal garden, created in the 1900s by Colonel Stephenson R Clarke – great grandfather of Andrewjohn, Borde Hill Garden’s present family in residence – then explore 200 acres of rolling mid Sussex park and woodland set in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty offering commanding views of the Sussex Weald overlooking the river Ouse valley.

Everyone from plant enthusiast to families is welcome to enjoy the diverse range of flora including rare and exotic trees from Asia and South America, and the seasonal carpet of bluebells and wood anemones.

Borde Hill Garden hosts 82 ‘Champion’ trees in its collection and offers regular tours of these most prized specimens, some the largest of their kind to be seen anywhere in the UK and grown from the original seeds collected by some of the world’s greatest plant collectors while on their exhibitions to China and the Himalayas.

Family friendly Borde Hill holds a wealth of educational and historical interests as well as the innovative Harry’s adventure playground overlooking the lakes, where children can let their imaginations run free or just relax and picnic.

You’re spoilt for choice of food at Borde Hill Garden – the characterful Elvira Café presents a varied menu of locally sourced and home cooked food, while for that special occasion, Jeremy’s Restaurant – listed in the Good Food Guide 2011 – serves inspirational modern European food in this, it’s 25th year.

www.bordehill.co.uk
• 01444 450326

Borde Hill Garden is open from 21 March to 11 September

22 to 30 October, daily from 10am to 6pm and is located 1½ miles north of Haywards Heath, West Sussex.