A labor of love created by Vita Sackville-West (1892-1962) and Harold Nicholson (1886-1968) over thirty years beginning in 1932. It is a garden set among a manor house built in the Middle Ages, ancient farm buildings, a moat and a tall Elizabethan tower. Along with Hidcote, it has a formal design, yet informal “cottage-style” planting.
Garden historian, author and designer Penelope Hobhouse sees Sissinghurst as the “epitome of English garden traditions – a translation of Edwardian splendor into a personal odyssey.” Much like Hidcote, there was “an integrated architectural framework” of garden rooms, a sequence of spaces, created with hardscaped (pink brick) walls or tall clipped hedges enclosing one area with another adjoining it. The compartmentalization of these color themed “garden rooms” contain axial views, focal points through doorways into gardens beyond. Within each very rigid, geometric enclosure is the contrasting softness of relaxed cottage-style gardening, an influence of Gertrude Jekyll and William Robinson. It is known that Vita treasured Robinson’s “The English Flower Garden” and “The Wild Garden” and visited him in his later years (presumably) seeking his advice.
Much of the fascination behind this garden stems from the family history of Vita as well as her ability to generate public interest in the garden. Sackville-West was a very successful writer on the fringes of the Bloomsbury Group. Along with her novels, short stories and poetry, she was also a garden correspondent for The Observer, where she regularly wrote about her experiences creating the garden. Additionally she gave garden tours, thus building up the public’s intrigue and fascination. Many might suspect that her inspiration for so many outdoor rooms was a subconscious recreation of a childhood spent at Knole,* the largest private home in England. Knole is known as a calendar house… 365 rooms!
The Roman peristyle garden is considered the first outdoor room and an extension of indoor space. However, Sissinghurst has perhaps more than any other garden influenced future designers to divide a landscape into “rooms”.
**All photos ©Todd Haiman 2011
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