YELLOW AGAINST GREY IN A DULWICH GRAVEYARD AND AN EXHIBITION OF MAGICAL PRINTS OF PLANTS AND GARDENS
Cornus mas – or the Cornelian Cherry – at the perfectly groomed Dulwich Old Burial Ground in South London.
‘Levens Hall Garden’ screen print, 1985 Norman Stevens ARA
Friends who visit Dulwich Village from Islington perhaps or Kent are always amazed to find a small section of picture-perfect Connecticut in South London, ten minutes from Victoria station. Saturday was a morning of glowering sunshine and the long dead inhabitants of the 400 year old cemetery were making earnest attempts to kick start the spring. The velvety day-glow green and yellow grass was erupting all over with silvery crocus buds and dense stooks of deep green narcissus foliage.
I was in Dulwich to pay homage to my favourite specimen of Cornus mas – the Cornelian Cherry – which is the centrepiece of a beautifully groomed burial ground in the middle of the village. The burial ground is home to a dozen Grade II listed eighteenth and nineteenth century tombs of wealthy locals, the graves of 35 victims of the plague in 1665 and where Old Bridget the Queen of the Norwood Gypsies was buried in 1768.
Cornus mas is a densely branched, deciduous, large shrub or small tree with small umbels of brilliant yellow flowers in late February and early March. It can be a rather unassuming tree but when given space – as it is here, the absolute queen amongst pale stone and open lawn – it can offer a sensational cloud of light and colour on the darkest of February days.
The advantage of giving the tree this sort of space is that it will have a much greater impact later in the year too, when it is in leaf. The potential for Cornus mas to be a really handsome specimen tree year round has now been realised by nurseries selling mature trees and if you have the room and the funds you could source a really handsome, spreading, semi mature “umbrella multi-stem’ from a nursery such as Deepdale Trees which supplies trees for many of the Chelsea Flower Show gardens.
At the other end of the scale, a young Cornus mas can be a brilliant addition to a softer, more natural style of gardening too. It was much favoured as a very tough, hardy tree by revolutionary Victorian gardener, William Robinson, and is currently lighting up a patch of open woodland in the Wild Garden at Gravetye Manor in Sussex, see the Gravetye Garden Blog
Tree and shrub specialists Bluebell Arboretum and Nursery recommend Cornus mas ‘Golden Glory’ AGM for its particular abundance of yellow flowers. After a hot summer, ‘Golden Glory’ may produce a small crop of small, shiny, edible red cherry-like fruits in autumn. If, however, you’re after a jar of the elusive – and let’s face it, ultimate weekend gift – homemade Cornelian Cherry Jam -the one to go for is Cornus mas ‘Jolico’ which the nursery describes as a ‘charming German form’ first selected to be used for commercial fruit production and which produces vivid red berries up to three times larger than those of a classic cornus mas.
Shiny red fruit of Cornus mas – like miniature scarlet plums.
The fruits of the Cornelian cherry are always bitter and need vast amounts of sugar to make them palatable but the idea is very romantic. Try Almost Turkish Recipes for a reliable recipe. Whilst waiting for your ‘Jolico’ to mature, maybe practise making the jam after a trip to the market on your next Mediterranean holiday?
In the meantime I am back in the UK on a stormy Saturday, on my way to the Royal Academy. I have been seeing posters all over town for a small exhibition of prints by Norman Stevens. I can’t get the luminous, sculptural, bonnet-like image of the Topiary Gardens at Levens Hall – a gorgeous fourteenth Century Manor House in the Lake District – out of my head. There is something about the quality of the light and the rigid laciness of the foliage against the blue of the sky that makes me uncertain at first as to whether it is even a photograph or a print.
In Piccadilly, on my way to the exhibition, I am caught by the glinting, shadowy, greys and blacks of the windows of St James’s Church with the candle-like, palest pink, buds of just-about-to-open Magnolia in front of them. This promise of voluptuous flower is my favourite moment in a Magnolia’s cycle:
St James’s Church, Piccadilly.
At the Norman Stevens exhibition the first print I encounter is an uncanny echo of the scene outside the church – exquisite patterns of foliage against a building – shadows and highlights and shades of grey:
‘Clapboard House with Fronds and Architectural French Curve’, 1974, Etching and aquatint, Norman Stevens ARA
Norman Stevens (1937-88) studied painting at Bradford College of Art along with a particularly talented group of artists included David Hockney. Originally a painter, he began printmaking in the early seventies and is now regarded as one of the foremost printmakers of his generation, revered for the way he always pushed boundaries with laboriously achieved effects of aquatint and mezzotint – and later screen prints -to create tone and texture, soft grain effects and even the appearance of water colour washes.
There is a beautiful print called The Darkling Thrush made in 1976 to illustrate a volume of poems by Thomas Hardy. A wonderful, tunnel of a path formed from tangled scratchy black branches with grey-white blossom against a salmony, metallic-pink twilight sky. There is a Japanese quality of restraint and delicacy to this atmospheric work.
‘The Darkling Thrush’, 1976, Norman Steven ARA Etching, aquatint
One of Norman Stevens’ latest prints is less comfortable but entirely memorable : the bright jauntiness of its colouring a poignant contrast to the sad subject matter – a pile of dismembered limbs of a favourite black walnut tree at Kew Gardens which fell in the storm of 1987. Stevens’ eye for colour when working on a screenprint was legendary. In the days before computer generated imagery he was brilliant at separating out the colours and predicting the results when they were printed one on top of the other – as fellow artist and print maker, Brad Faine writes in the exhibition catalogue ‘no mean feat when one uses ten to fifteen hand-made stencil separations.’
‘Black Walnut Tree’ 1987, Norman Stevens ARA, Screenprint
But what I have really come for is Stevens’ etchings of topiary in great English country gardens – a dream world away from his crisp, California-inspired earlier work, with paintings and prints of white louvred windows, clapboard buildings and the foliage of tropical plants.
Porch, 1971, Norman Stevens ARA, aqua-tec on canvas, Tate
The Royal Academy exhibition features work inspired by the Victorian country house, Knightshayes Court in Devon, Painswick Rococo Garden in Gloucestershire and of course, Levenshall Topiary Gardens in Cumbria.
‘Painswick, Moonlight’ 1979, Norman Stevens ARA, etching and aquatint
I am entranced by ‘Painswick Moonlight’ a finely worked, almost stippled, image of an impossibly perfect, dark, moonlit world of ranked monumental trees and mesmerisingly stripey shadows.
By Sunday evening I am walking through the cloisters of Canterbury Cathedral with one of my sons on the way to Evensong. I love the way the freeform yew mound peers, monster-like over the finely carved decorative roof. I think Norman Stevens would have enjoyed the rhythmic archctecture and the shadowy presence of plantlife.