Showing posts with label Guelph Horticultural Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guelph Horticultural Society. Show all posts

Thursday, March 8, 2018

An Art Collector's Garden


with photography by Maggie Sale


There was a time when art collections were displayed in grand homes, and were a sign of wealth and privilege, but with the advent of the internet, the popularity of artist run co-ops and studio tours, works of art have never been more accessible or affordable for the average person.

At her home in Guelph, Ontario, Maggie Sale has gathered a collection of artwork that she displays in her large suburban garden.

"Having an English background, combined with artistic family members, and having travelled throughout the UK and other places where there are beautiful gardens, I have always appreciated art in the garden. I guess it was inevitable that I would find my own pieces, but never set to become an art collector!," she says.  

Maggie is an accomplished photographer and world traveler whose adventures have taken her to far off places like Iceland, Morocco, Spain, Istanbul and Jordan. Last fall Maggie and her husband Julian visited Peru. Then in February, they toured parts of Sri Lanka for sixteen days.

If you have a moment, pop over and take a look at the image galleries that chronicle some of Maggie's travels. From her recent trip to Peru, there are stunning views of Machu Picchu, a 15th century Inca citadel situated on a mountain range almost eight thousand feet above sea level.  There are also images of ancient temples and crumbling palaces, elephants and other exotic creatures from her most recent visit to Sri Lanka.

Maggie's collection of artwork began with a purchase for the couple's English summer home.

"The first piece was purchased in England for our 1850's stone and slate cottage which had a small walled garden. At that time we moved from Toronto, where we had a very small townhouse garden, with no art, to a larger home in Guelph. I began to acquire additional artwork for the cottage and pieces for the garden of our new house," says Maggie.

Both Maggie's passion for photography and her travels have been a great sources of inspiration.


"Travelling certainly helps you appreciate other countries, their culture and uniqueness," she says,"Photography takes this a step further, where you are developing your "eye", searching for interesting subject matter and compositions, whether in natural or man-made environments, or in large or small scale."

"I think there is no doubt that both travel and my photography have influenced my own creativity, which in turn has had a spill-over effect into the garden, an important but more recently developed aspect of my life. Colour, form and texture in the garden and the way plants are grouped, are all influenced by developing ones "eye" just as it does in photography." 


While the focus of this post is art in the garden, I would hate to miss the opportunity to draw your attention to the beauty of the garden itself. 

A carpet of groundcovers, which hug the earth, and low-growing, mounded perennials keep the front garden looking every bit as tidy and presentable as a lawn. This is not to say that the garden is flat by any means. Groups of taller perennials create an gently undulating landscape of hills and valleys.

Even without a ton of flowers, there is still lots of color. In the foreground of Maggie's photograph (above) Creeping Thyme and Silvermound, Artemisia schmidtiana add a hint of blue-green. A couple of burgundy colored Heuchera add warm color into the mix. Yellow springs from the Angelina Stonecrop, Sedum rupestre 'Angelina'.

One clever design trick is the flagstone pathway that links the front yard with the boulevard garden. Even though the sidewalk divides the overall garden into these two distinct areas, the path joins them into a unified whole.

This post looks primarily on the front garden, which I haven't featured before, but you can take a tour of the back garden here.

In this photograph, Maggie has captured a tapestry of shade loving perennials. 

1. Unidentified Fern (an easy-care fern with a similar look–Lady Fern Athyrium filix-femina) 2. Fern-leaf Bleeding Heart, Dicentra 3. Hosta 4. Golden Creeping Jenny, Lysimachia nummularia 'Aurea' 5. Japanese Fern, Athyrium niponicum 6. Tassel Fern, Polystichum polyblepharum 7. Miniature Hosta 8. Lamium 9. Variegated Hosta


How to choose an Artwork


For most people, artwork represents a bit of an investment. If your spending money, you don't want to get it wrong. Where do you even begin to choose a piece of art? 

Choose artwork that speak to you on a personal level. This makes it impossible to go wrong. 

"As soon as I saw this piece of art, I knew it was the right accent for my rock garden at the front of the house," says Maggie.

"It is visible from the sidewalk and sits on top of a slight berm where it's circular form draws attention. It was made by an artist (unknown to me) in the Ottawa region and was bought from an art gallery in Eden Mills, near Guelph. The slate layers remind me of slate buildings and walls in the UK. The metal has now taken on a lovely rusty patina."

A couple of Tips on Choosing Artwork for the Garden:


• Think about where you want to place a piece of art when your making your choice. A large sculpture makes an excellent garden focal point. By its very nature, the location of a smaller work of art is likely to be somewhat obscured by foliage and flowers. A small sculpture is often a nice surprise that you happen upon as you stroll through the garden. 

• Ignore the rule that says you ought to choose small artwork for a small garden. Depending on the piece, one large sculpture in a small garden can be quite stunning.

• Another rule suggests that artwork you choose should be in keeping with the style of your home. To me this is a little like matching a painting to the color of the sofa. With the right placement, a contemporary piece can look terrific in the garden of a more traditional home and vice versa.

• The impact an artwork will have is somewhat determined by scale. A large sculpture makes a big statement. A small sculpture speaks quietly.

1. Mountain Bluet, Centaurea montana 2. Dwarf Bearded Iris 3. Arabis or Rock cress 4. Heuchera 5. Snow-in-summer, Cerastium tomentosum 6. Sweet Woodruff, Galium odoratum 7. Dwarf Bearded Iris

This is a photograph of the front of the house a little later in the summer. Daylilies, Echinacea and Russian Sage (not shown) are a few of the perennials that add mid-summer color.


Like any garden ornament, a work of art can be something unexpected you happen upon.

"This was the first Shona sculpture from Zimbabwe that we acquired," says Maggie, "It was bought for our cottage from a local art gallery owner, who was a friend of my mother. It introduced me to a beautiful style of African art that I didn't know before." 

"When we sold our cottage 3 years ago, we brought the sculpture and a couple of other pieces of garden art back to Guelph. This small sculpture, almost hidden until you stand in front of the small rock garden in the backyard, complements the plantings and existing rocks perfectly - a happy coincidence!"

A few Tips for Displaying Artwork in a Garden Setting:


• Less is more. Too much visual clutter diminishes the impact of each piece. Don't ask artwork to compete for the attention of garden visitors.

•Aim for contrast to help a sculpture stand out in the landscape. For example, place light objects against a dark background of foliage and set a dark artwork in front of bright flowers and foliage.

• One of the biggest trends in interior design is an eclectic mix that mixes traditional and contemporary furniture and accessories. There is nothing to say that the same approach won't work in a garden setting. Go ahead and mix different types of artwork (example a traditional figure with a modern sculpture). Just be sure to give each piece enough space to shine.


Artwork need not be big or grand to be meaningful. It can be something as small as a single poppy. 

"The red ceramic poppy was a gift to my husband Julian from my brother in England," explains Maggie.

"The poppy is a remembrance of Julian's uncle who died in the second world war. It was one of the red poppies that were part of an art installation at the Tower of London in 2014 to commemorate the centenary of the outbreak of the first world war (the poppies numbered over 880,000 - one for every British service person who died in WW1). The poppies were sold afterwards to the public to raise funds for service charities."


Family members have added their own unique genius to Maggie's collection.

"The cedar driftwood was picked up by my in-law's many, many years ago on one of their frequent fishing trips to Georgian Bay," says Maggie.

"Our son Jayce, who creates art out of found objects, used a piece of red metal (resembling a moth), which he found when the house next door to his home in Vancouver was demolished, to make the piece that fits perfectly into the top part of the driftwood."


The ceramic owl that now presides over this planting is another of the pieces Maggie brought back to Canada when she and Julian sold their property in England a few years ago.

"Every year there was a pottery festival at one of the stately homes near our cottage in Cumbria in the north west of England. Simon Griffiths was a artist who had many birds, animals etc. in his stall there. They were so life-like that I knew it would be a wonderful garden ornament for our cottage, so we bought the Tawny Owl. When we sold the cottage, we brought it back to Canada. We found a post in a local wood and erected it in our garden here," Maggie recounts.


This last piece of artwork owes its inspiration from a place far from Canada.

"We lost a large locust tree in a storm a few years ago which resulted in a corner opening up. I decided it was an ideal place to put a larger statement piece of art. The swirling black stone sculpture made by Sylvester Samanyanga, an artist from the Shona tribe of the indigenous people of Zimbabwe, was bought last summer at an outdoor art gallery near Peterborough called ZimArt's Rice Lake GalleryIt makes a nice focal point in the back garden."says Maggie.

To close this post, I asked Maggie to make a few suggestions for someone looking to start a collection of their own:

• Start small and local

• Go on a garden tour to see what other gardeners are doing with plantings and art. 

• Visit local public gardens and art galleries for a broader picture. 

• Take a studio art tour and learn about and visit local artists - you might find the perfect piece right on your doorstep! 

• Expand your search with the internet, if you are travelling.

• Above all, be patient and enjoy your search! It might take some time to find the right piece(s). Art collections grow with time and can't really be achieved in a hurry - but they are worth the wait!

Great advice to be sure!

 Many thanks to Maggie for sharing her art collection and garden
through this lovely series of photographs.

About the Photographer: 


Maggie Sale is originally from England and has lived in Canada for over 40 years with her husband Julian. Most of her photography is done outdoors, and often involves travel, which she loves. Maggie is a life member of the Etobicoke Camera Club, a member of the Grand River Imaging and Photographic Society and the Canadian Association for Photographic Art. Her photographs have been published in magazines and books in Canada, the USA and UK. Maggie is also a member of the Guelph Horticultural Society and is a committee member and photographer for the Guelph Annual Garden Tour. Her website is www.maggiesale.ca

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

A Photographer's Shade Garden


When do I feel rather anxious about showing photographs of a garden? When the gardener in question just happens to be a very accomplished photographer!

 Maggie Sale has traveled to some far off places and her photography is quite amazing. If you have a minute, go take a look at some of the photographs from her 2012 trip to Iceland. Maggie has managed to capture the austere beauty of the Icelandic landscape quite masterfully her black and white photographs. I love the images of glacial ice reflected in the mirror-smooth surface of the sea and a huge rock formation that almost looks like it is floating on the surface of the water.  

There are also lots of colorful photographs in the galleries on Maggie's website. I think the series of pictures of brightly painted fishing boats from a 2016 trip to Morocco are just wonderful. 

Here's a link to the main gallery, so you can pick out your own favourites.

A tapestry of shade plants in the front garden

A container planting at the entrance to the backyard.


Six years ago Maggie and her husband Julian (also a photographer) moved from a townhouse in Toronto, with a postage sized garden, to a much larger property in Guelph, Ontario that backs on a public park. 

At the front of the house Maggie created a boulevard garden and a rock garden with local quarried stones. In this post we are going to head down a paved path at the side of the house and have a look at the shade garden in the backyard.

Veronica, Speedwell


A deck off the main floor of the house overlooks the garden which slopes gently down from the house. Large trees, which skirt the back of the property, make this a shade garden.


Along one side of the property a chain link fence has become a living wall of green.


Covered in Virginia Creeper, it makes the property's boundary all but disappear and blend into the surrounding landscape. 


At the back of the yard, there is a cozy dining area framed by a lattice fence. Again, large trees blur the edges of the suburban lot and make it feel as though the garden sits on the edge of a secluded woodland.



I want to draw your attention to the Lamium at the foot of this hosta. Lamium is such a great groundcover! You can read more about Lamiums in this post (great varieties, as well as one to avoid). Here I will feature the two seen on the right:

Lamium maculatum 'White Nancy' has silver leaves with a green edge and mauve-pink flowers. It forms a spreading clump, but isn't invasive. Average garden soil is fine for this evergreen perennial. Part to full shade. Height: 15-20 cm ( 6-8inches), Spread: 30-60 cm (12-23 inches). USDA zones: 2-9.

Lamium maculatum 'Anne Greenway' (on the bottom right) has green foliage streaked with silver and edged in gold. 'Anne Greenway' has mauve-pink flowers in spring and will continue to flower off and on, if you deadhead it. Once established, it is fairly drought tolerant. Again, average garden soil is fine for this evergreen perennial. Part to full shade. Height: 15-20 cm ( 6-8inches), Spread: 30-60 cm (12-23 inches). USDA zones: 2-9.


Maggie has one other Lamium in her garden that I want to bring to your attention: False Lamium, Lamium galeobdolon 'Herman's Pride'. Even though you see a big patch here, this is not an invasive plant. The silvery-green variegation makes it a terrific companion for hostas or any other shade perennial.  

Lamium galeobdolon 'Herman's Pride' has small yellow flowers mid-spring, but you really want to grow it for the foliage. This Lamium can be easily grown in a range of garden soils. Part shade to full shade. Drought tolerant once established. Height: 25-30 cm (10-12 inches), Spread: 30-45 cm (12-18 inches). USDA zones: 2-9.



A couple of container plantings punctuate the garden and add a hit of color.


This container planting incorporates Sweet Potato Vine, Begonias and Wandering Jew, Tradescantia albiflora or Zebrina pendula (a houseplant) among other plants.



A second container planting next to the dining table and chairs.


Two more shade plants: Canadian Wild Ginger (left) and Brunnera 'Jack Frost' (right).

Canadian Wild Ginger, Asarum canadense is native to the woodlands of Eastern north America. It bright green, heart-shaped leaves and insignificant brownish flowers that are largely hidden by the foliage. It will colonize an area and tends to be more vigorous than European Wild Ginger (Asarum europaeum), but is not considered to be invasive. Part to full shade. Sandy or clay soil are fine. Average to moist soil suit this plant best. Height: 10-15 cm ( 4-6 inches), Spread: 15-30 cm (6-12 inches). USDA zones: 3-9.


1. Lungwort, Pulmonaria 2. Japanese Forest Grass, Hakonechloa 3. Variegated Sedum 4. Astilbe 5. Bleeding Heart Dicentra spectabilis 'Goldheart' (Maggie also has Common Bleeding Heart, Dicentra spectabilis) 6. Blue Star, Amsonia 7. Hosta 8. Ostrich Fern, Matteuccia struthiopteris


Ostrich Ferns, Matteuccia struthiopteris are a native ferns that are easily grown in average, medium to damp soil. They are happiest however, in rich soil with constant moisture (the drought we are experiencing here in Southern Ontario have turned my Ostrich Ferns crispy brown). They spread by underground rhizomes and can form dense colonies when grown in favourable conditions. Ostrich Ferns prefer a cooler climate and don't fair well in the hot, humid summers of the southern States. Part shade to full shade. Height: 3-6 ft, Spread: 5-8 ft. USDA Zones: 3-7.


I asked Maggie for the story behind the ceramic owl that presides over the planting in this section of the garden.

"Until last spring we owned a cottage in England near my family in Cumbria in the N.W.", Maggie says,"Every year there was a pottery festival at one of the stately homes nearby. Simon Griffiths was a artist who had many birds, animals etc. in his stall there. They were so life-like that I knew it would be a wonderful garden ornament for our cottage, so we bought the Tawny Owl... When we sold the cottage, we brought it back to Canada...We found a post in a local wood and erected it in our garden here."

This end's today's tour. I hope you enjoyed seeing Maggie's shade garden.

More Information and Links: 

Maggie Sale is originally from England, but has lived in Canada for over 40 years. Most of her photography is done outdoors, and often involves travel, which she loves. Maggie is a member of the Grand River Imaging and Photographic Society, as well as Canadian Association for Photographic Art. The book "Facing Death-A Companion in Words and Images" by Linda Watson, for which Maggie contributed photographic illustrations, won a number of awards including the prestigious Benjamin Franklin award.