Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Victorian Villa Gardens

                The Victorian villa garden was an expression of taste, wealth, education, fashion, and possession. The owners of these villa gardens showed that they were important members of society in a significant way. It was a status symbol for these citizens. The garden was a lush expression of their potential and it was a way to communicate this message to everyone.
                The Victorian villa gardens were privately owned and the owner employed a gardener to design and shape their leisurely landscape. There were several commonalities between the different villa gardens that united them to each other, and the Victorian style. The villas garden commonalities included a formal garden close to the house itself. The formal structured gardens included various elements such as parterres, flower beddings, and historical references through sculpture. The formal garden then made way for the informal garden which extended further from the house. Once the visitor walked further from the house, the geometrical layout and ordered patterns left the garden as long stretching and looping pathways, fields, forests, and vistas were the main focus of the informal garden. While these elements tied villa gardens together, there were items that made the villa gardens particularly Victorian. A great variety of foreign and colorful flowers was a Victorian garden trait. Plant hunters would send back samples to Europe and have them replicated for all wealthy landowners to place in their gardens. Another Victorian age element was beddings. Orchids were particularly rare and sought after. Flower beddings were low-growing flowers that were colorfully arranged in aesthetically pleasing shapes and figures. With the higher availability of flowers for this particular type of feature, the flower beddings could become more and more complicated and impressive. More features of the Victorian Gardens can be found here: http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/article-1356400599248/

                Inspiration for the Victorian villa garden came from the oscillation of fashion in the gardening world. Before the Victorian garden, the English Landscape garden was very popular. There has been a constant struggle between natural and controlled in gardens. In the English Landscape garden, the layout was much more natural. By the time that the Victorian age came about, the sponsors were interested in swinging the interest back to making the garden more controlled. They were interested in reviving classical ideas and making elements that showed the structured control of flowers in the garden. Yet, the full swing of fashion interests did not quite reach the intensity of the Baroque, and still retained elements of informality and nature. The natural elements of English Landscapes were not quite eliminated from the garden and were maintained throughout the Victorian villa gardens.

                Victorian villa gardens were a unique fusion of typical Victorian garden design and personal adjustments. The villa and personal ownership allowed tweaking and editing of the Victorian elements in the garden. Yet, designers always included classic Victorian features in their gardens. Parterres, flower beds, and a mix of formal and informal gardens were unique to Victorian villa gardens.

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