कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Following the North star
Country Life UK
|September 27, 2023
Victorian artist Marianne North braved jungle rapids, forests and mountains to capture the blowsy beauty of tropical plants on canvas. Carla Passino paints the life of a woman who defied conventions to forge her own path
-
THE door of the Marianne North Gallery at Kew Gardens in west London opens and three visitors make their way in, sun hats askew, looking a little battered in their checked shirts and shorts. Their jaws drop. Whatever they were expecting when they sought respite from this summer’s lone day of muggy heat, it wasn’t the barrage of colours that explodes from every wall. Here are the blowsy flowers of a giant Amazon water lily, rich white with pollen or spent and pink after the insects’ harvest; there is a bilimbi, its trunk festooned with small purple flowers. Asian orchids burst pink and alluring from a tangle of tropical leaves. The fiery blooms of the Indian coral tree clamour for attention from an inner door’s lintel and, in a corner, a butterfly hovers over the plump bulb of Boophone toxicaria, brown under a pink cloud of petals.
Every inch of the gallery is covered in vivid botanical paintings, hung in a scheme of geometrical perfection conceived by the artist, Marianne North, herself, more than a century ago. When she bequeathed her collection to Kew, North also paid for the building to house it, but stipulated that her paintings would have to remain together in the way she had envisaged, in part, says gallery manager Victoria Kew, ‘because she didn’t want any interfering botanist coming to change it round. We think she even painted some fillers to make it all fit together’.
यह कहानी Country Life UK के September 27, 2023 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Country Life UK से और कहानियाँ
Country Life UK
Opposites can attract
As a big bookcase designed by Peter Waals proves large pieces of furniture can do well, a notable collection shows harmony can be born from difference
3 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
His green and pleasant land
Few artists travelled as little as John Constable, but his deep knowledge of the parts of England he loved gave him insights that others missed. Susan Owens explores the places that delighted him
6 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
Dreaming of roses
A thousand English roses now bloom in the restored walled garden that forms the heart of this 27-acre estate, writes Charles Quest-Ritson
4 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
Ring for peace
A COPIOUS quantity of apple strudel became the unintended consequence of a winter walking holiday in the Austrian Tyrol.
2 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
Best of the pests
Pity the feral pigeon: long campaigned against as an urban nuisance, it is the descendant of birds lured into human service, some of which distinguished themselves in wartime
3 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
Red alert
The time is ripe for tomatoes in every form. We are days into British Tomato Fortnight (June 1–14) and weeks from Royal Ascot (June 16–20), where Bright Tomato has been declared the inaugural Colour of the Year by Ascot creative director Daniel Fletcher.
1 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
Totally tropical
I FIRST grew pineapple guava, also called feijoa (Acca or Feijoa sellowiana) almost a quarter of a century ago, when there were few nurseries stocking them.
3 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
Brewed awakening: where London learnt to talk
Rupert Clague explores how caffeine-fuelled conversation in Hanoverian London’s ‘penny universities’ helped shape the modern world—and where that same spirit still lingers today
5 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
The legacy Percy Shaw and cat's eyes
BEHIND the retina in a cat’s eyes lurks the tapetum lucidum, a layer of tissue that acts as a mirror, or a retroreflector, and allows the animal to see in the dark.
1 mins
June 03, 2026
Country Life UK
Britain is told to spill the beans
HOME-GROWN legumes have a vital role to play in strengthening national food security and reducing the UK's increasing reliance on imported food, the audience heard at last month's UK Legume Research Community Conference, held at the James Hutton Institute in Invergowrie, Perthshire.
2 mins
June 03, 2026
Translate
Change font size

