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A completely fascinating man, he designed a tropical dry garden that is heavemly, I will
bring his book with me Friday.
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Groundbreaker: Gilles Clement
By: Louisa ones
mom
photo: Georges Leveque
Gilles Clement is a hard man to pin down. Best known as the designer of original public
parks in France and gardens from Chile to New Caledonia, he also writes popular
fables, novels and philosophical reflections. He is an outspoken ecologist, botanist and
entomologist who discovered the butterfly Bunoeopsic dementli in 1974 in Cameroon.
Clement has always been a leader rather than a follower of fashion. In the early 1970s,
having just graduated with degrees in both agronomy and landscape design, he was
already defending "biological gardening," an early version of today's "work with, not
against nature" theme. He champions a "humanist ecology" — not the Romantic
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veneration of nature unspoiled by man, but partnership. Now a professor at the
prestigious Versailles National School of Landscape Architecture, he is its only lecturer
to teach natural history as well as design concepts. Young admirers turn out in droves to
hear him lecture all over France and would make him into a guru, were he not
humorous and unassuming. Not unlike other masters of the profession, he himself
prefers to be called, simply, a gardener.
Life-changing moment: As a teenager, helping his father spray roses with a highly toxic
chemical, he got some in an open cut and spent two days in a coma. Soon after, Clement
escaped his father's highly regimented garden in the beautifully wooded Creuse area
south of Paris to study nature in a nearby valley, and in 1977, he was able to buy the
land in Creuse where he had sought refuge when he was young. He built a stone house
there with his own hands and transformed the clearing into one of France's most
admired gardens, now called La Vallee. It is still a sanctuary for himself, family, friends
and other fauna.
At La Vallee, Clement first experimented with the "Moving Garden" (lejardin en
mouvement), influential as of 1985. Abandoned farmland, left to its own devices, gradually
evolves toward forest growth. For Clement, the gardener's intervention is not only
admissible, it is central. He observes: "Watching wasteland, I am not only fascinated by
the energy of nature's reclamation, I also want to know how to insert myself in the midst
of this powerful flow." He chooses the moment when spontaneous growth involves all
the elements usually found in a garden: trees, shrubs, vines, bulbs, grasses — even wild
roses. The gardener's role then is to guide and enrich in sympathy with natural process,
integrating accidents like fallen trees. Clement uses no chemicals, no supplemental
watering and no noisy, energy-wasting machinery. But he does prune: A self-sown
willow is trimmed to show off its multiple trunks; wild hornbeams are clipped into
smooth domes; a path uphill meanders through the heart of a sprawling smokebush
(Colima obovatus). Most paths are simply mown grass, their routing changing from year to
year to preserve self-sown clumps of foxglove, verbascum or hogweed, which draws
many interesting insects. "A garden is always artificial," he insists, "but home gardens
can become wildlife preserves."
Movement, as he sees it, involves seasonal variation and change due to self-sowing and
species migration. Moving gardens, lived in or visited, are never purely visual but very
tactile — you kneel, lie down, rub against, smell, inhale. "My gardens are meant to be
brushed against," writes Clement. I-Iis first book devoted to the Moving Garden has
been reprinted five times.
In the late '80s and '90s, Clement worked on mainly public projects such as a main
section of the Parc Andre-Citroen in Paris (with landscape designer Main Provost and
architects Patrick Berger, Jean-Francois Jodry and Jean-Paul Viguier), the Valloires
Abbey gardens (Les Jardins de Valloires) in Picardy, the Jardins de la Grande Arche de la
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Defense in Paris, the Henri Matisse Park in Lille, gardens of the Chateau de Blois and
the Mediterranean Gardens (Le Jardin des Mediterranees) of the Domaine du Rayol. His
most influential work internationally has perhaps been his part of the Parc Andre-
Citroen. It includes a Moving Garden managed by the park staff: It is they who decide
where the paths will be mown from year to year, to respect self-sown plants. Nearby, his
color-themed gardens have a complex symbolism, which visitors might sense even if
uninformed. Mothers report that when they enter the Green Garden, linked to the
theme of silence, their children often stop talking.
In 1997, Piet Oudolf, I-Ienk Gerritsen and Michael King commented on these gardens
(in Nienwe Women, nieume tuthen): "Gilles Clement's triumph at Parc Andre-Citroen
demonstrates the range of possibilities the art of gardening offers for both self-
expression and communication. He has shown how ideas may be presented both on the
grand scale and in the tiniest detail, making his approach as relevant to the private
gardener as it should be to the broader world of the landscape architect."
Clement refuses the romantic idea of an artist's signature, but his public projects have
common elements: He often links separate spaces - formally, as at Citroen or
informally, like clearings in a forest — each with its own character. Connecting paths are
meandering and multidirectional. Where he includes a single long axis (at Le Grande
Arche de la Defense in the Domaine du Rayon, it never dominates in the sense of
imposing a hierarchy and reveals little of the mysteries on either side, easily accessed
from the long line but invisible until you happen right upon it. He sometimes uses
geometric shapes, especially around historic monuments or where symbolism is
suggested, but this formality is open-ended, almost subversive in its unpredictability. His
rejection of hierarchy, in garden design as in life, is almost obsessive. For several years
running, Clement refused the French national prize for landscape architecture, insisting
it should be given to the anonymous farmers, engineers and foresters who are the real
architects of the landscape. In 1999, the prize was bestowed on him without his consent.
Clement calls the Moving Garden a conceptual tool. His second one, the Planetary
Garden, emerged after he had seen the first photographs of Earth from space. He
imagined extending the confines — and care — lavished on home gardens to the whole
globe. In 2000, Clement directed a major science exhibit in Paris to explain and provide
positive examples of this theme. He also took a stance on species migrations similar to
that of American writer Michael Pollan, which has not always made him popular in the
scientific community. "The main objective," writes Clement, "is to encourage biological
diversity, a source of wonder and our guarantee for the future."
For the past few years, Clement has been developing another concept, which he calls
"landscapes of the Third Kind." A study of highly managed farm and forest land south
of Paris led him to seek out hidden spaces that escape monoculture and are forgotten by
human industry, in-between spaces often abandoned after misuse, still capable of
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spontaneous revival. I-Ie has always had sympathy for marginal and neglected spaces —
as La Vallee once was. His attempts at integrating such freedom into municipal design
have proved controversial.
Clement continues to publish, consult and create worldwide. You never quite know
where or when. Constant however is his faith in the garden: "Real terrain, mysterious
but explorable, it invites the gardener to define its space, its wealth, its habitat. It holds
humanity suspended in time. Each seed announces tomorrow. It is always a project. The
garden produces goods, bears symbols, accompanies dreams. It is accessible to
everyone. It promises nothing and gives everything."
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