Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe - The Gardens at Shute House
Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe considered landscape design as "the mother of all arts". He was one of the leading Landscape Architects of 20th Century and a founding member of the Landscape Institute with a successful career spanning almost 70 years. Jellicoe regenerated towns wounded by the war and explored the relationship between design and the subconscious.
Jellicoe recognized the experience of a landscape and the effects of time on a place. He also understood the powers of nature on the human mind and designed gardens free from the constraints of formal architecture to engage the subconscious. The subconscious of course, being different and unique to every individual.
The gardens at Shute House were originally designed between 1969 and 1988 and revitalised again by Jellicoe in 1993. There is a wonderful enigma to the garden, a mysterious adventure with flourishing findings around each corner. There is a restricted colour pallet and emphasis on evergreen planting to provide a sanctuary for reflection throughout the year. The design not only appeases the eyes and mind but engages other senses via musical water foundations and canals that reflect the thriving environment. It is clear in the design of Shute House that a surrounding can profoundly influence mood and behaviour, these pictures alone reveal the enchantment and surprise of the place, teaming with wonder of the natural world.

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