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Food in the City
The Culture of Cultivation |
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In England, garden and countryside are part of a single
strong idea. The land is seen as a whole, where man and nature should
work together in a practical balance that crosses the garden fence. In
the current crisis of the countryside it is important to remember that
long tradition of easy-going integration, and not to flop from one extreme
solution to another, like a stranded fish. Countryside is a complex concept.
It is as much a psychological and cultural state as an equation of economic
and scientific factors.
The rhythm of English culture since the Enlightenment
- from Pope to Wordsworth to Goldsworthy - has placed Man and Nature in
a happy, muddled harmony. Voltaire was profoundly affected by Alexander
Pope's new garden in Twickenham, where the garden deliberately looked
out to the Thames and the Richmond Hills, seeing the whole sequence as
man in nature. Landscape became the metaphor and the medium for redefining
the relationship with the land, as well as the world. The English Landscape
Movement was as much a new philosophy as a new aesthetic. Gone was the
introverted ideal of a Paradise Garden of contained geometrical perfection,
protected from the wilderness beyond. In its place came an idea of man
as part of nature; man involved and delighting in a productive countryside.
Hierarchical, baroque separation was replaced by an integrated, classical
Arcadia. |
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These weren't original ideas. They were a revival of
Italian Renaissance precepts, in turn a revival of the humanist principals
of the Augustan poets and the Greeks before them. Virgil and Cicero believed
that working the land helped you to think straight. Getting out of the city
and sweating in the fields gave you a chance to clear your mind and freshen
up your morals. In this humanist landscape, food and animals were as important
as temples and summer houses. English gardens looked out rather than inwards.
Kent's ha-ha did more than expand the view; it helped to redefine the relationship
with the land. The animated prospect is key. The people and animals inhabiting
the wider landscape became an integral part of the garden view. Man working
in and with nature was a vision of philosophical as well as aesthetic beauty.
The relationship between man, the garden and the productive landscape at Villa
la Pietra in Florence, where the olive groves flow through to the Villa, inspired
the creators of many great 20th century gardens. At Hidcote, Sissinghurst
and Hinton Ampner, whose owners visited Villa La Pietra, enjoyment of the
gardens is bound up with their place in the surrounding working countryside.
Horace Walpole delighted in his animated prospect from Strawberry Hill along
the Thames to Twickenham - his 'seaport in miniature' - where acknowledgement
and appreciation of the surrounding working world was fundamental to his enjoyment
of the scene. Man being productive on the land was a key to the whole notion.
At Rousham, the view out to the countryside beyond the property is an integral
part of the garden; a shared visual democracy of landownership appreciated
by Addison.
It is useful to contrast England with North America.
In terms of its self-identity, North America has city, agribusiness and wilderness.
There is no real concept of countryside. In England, by contrast, there is
town and countryside, but no real wilderness. Some of our most valuable habitats,
Sites of Special Scientific Interest, are entirely reliant on man-management.
The tidal meadows at Syon, for example, are dependent on cattle grazing; and
Richmond Park relies on deer for its management and rich ecology. If man were
to abandon these areas, the land would gradually be colonised by scrub and
woodland and lose its internationally recognised bio-diversity.
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We have a chance to turn back now, or at least to turn
forward. It is as important to understand how we relate to the urban as
much as the rural environment. The Royal Park network, the green streets
and spaces in cities, are part of that continuous concept. They are socially
inclusive. People from all over the world, from any culture, know how
to use a park and green space.
Growing food is also a fundamental. To plant and
eat your own vegetables is a great way to relate to the land. Looking
at examples in San Francisco, it became clear that from the youngest to
the oldest, the ability to grow something was central to an understanding
of one's place in the world. One woman said; 'my allotment doesn't cost
me very much, but it saves a phenomenal amount in psychiatrist's fees'.
At Borough Market, the 12th century market right in the heart of the densest
part of the capital by London Bridge, the farmers' markets and vegetable
markets are thriving. They are helping to stimulate the regeneration of
the whole area. Locally grown food, local markets and small farm units
are the key to the health of the people and the land.
What we do with gardens, how we choose to exercise
our notion of the animated prospect, our fantasies and whims, and how
we relate to the earth is wonderfully varied; we shouldn't be prescriptive
about it. City and suburban gardens are as relevant as country estates
or village plots. Part of the failure of tower blocks has been the separation
from the land beneath. One of the most exciting things going on in garden
thinking at the moment, which relates directly back to the countryside,
is how you can redefine housing to create gardens and communal spaces
using roofs, balconies and street-level plots to incorporate dense living
with green living.
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Urban and rural spaces need to work together. Green space
is an integral part of English towns. It helps to reduce the need to flee
at weekends. Conservation is not just about preserving and storing what has
happened in the past; it is about how we take the whole of the land forward
into the future and how we manage it. We need to look at the way that we use
energy, the way we save it. We need to look at where we build our houses and
make them work with the landscape. We need to think again about what a garden
is. It isn't just within the garden fence, it is beyond.
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Who can make it happen? All of us. We have to help the
government understand the diverse complexity of the solutions; they are lost
in quick fixes. At one level allotments and small holdings are already leading
the way. On a grander scale some private landowners are taking interesting
steps. The Duchy of Cornwall sets an impressive example of organic and holistic
farming and land management. And on a private estate at Heveningham, a young
family have implemented Capability Brown's unexecuted plans 200 years after
his death. Hundreds of hectares of arable land have been returned to grazed
pasture, 2 kilometres of lakes have been dug, the woodlands have been brought
back into health and over 50 further hectares have been planted. At Painshill
Park a private charity has brought food production and sensible management
of the land into public access, understanding and enjoyment. These examples
show some of the solutions that government can encourage as an alternative
to either subsidising volume food production or eliminating agriculture in
Britain altogether.
Foot and Mouth is an ongoing tragedy. One minor consolation,
however, is that the debate about the countryside has finally been brought
inescapably to government attention; how we take this debate forward now is
critical. Do we rely on Common Agricultural Policy subsidies and a regimented
tourist vision of the countryside? Or do we loosen up and allow the scale,
the complexity, the eccentricity of the landscape to reassert itself and reconnect
with the cities, gardens and the people who live in them.
Who leads the debate? The National Trust, probably more
than any other body, has the ability to take the rounded view. It is the largest
non-government landowner in the UK with 270,000 hectares of land; it has 2.8
million members and major influence on the cultural landscape, the coastline,
and National Parks. The Trust is beginning to seize that opportunity. With
exemplar projects it can show how gardens can relate to their surrounding
countryside - for example how Stowe can be grazed by sheep again; and how
Ham House can replant its avenues, to enhance public access and bio-diversity.
The National Trust has the resources to show the way forward, to set the pattern,
by example, by lobbying and by being involved in the debate. The government
is listening.
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We now, each of us, need to give government the message
in as simple a way as possible; what is important to us in terms of food quality,
landscape character and ecological diversity. It is time to stop complaining
about subsidies and start promoting investment in the countryside. By helping
the government and the European Union to see the whole picture, we can use
this moment of crisis to encourage an agriculture which manages the land in
a way that makes long term sense and, in turn, gives inspiration to look afresh
at our gardens and public spaces. And finally we need to find ways to reach
the next generation and allow them the possibility of getting dirt under their
fingernails from the very start.
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It is a most exciting time for gardens and countryside.
England took a step at the beginning of the 18th century that fundamentally
changed the way man relates to nature. That step has prepared us for the leap
we need to take in the 21st century.
1732 ed.awm
back to top
back to current issues
list
back to philosophy
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