Cecil Beaton's Garden Party - Garden Museum
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Cecil Beaton’s Garden Party

Best known for his iconic fashion photography, Cecil Beaton had a bouquet of creative talents: he was also an accomplished costume and set designer for film, theatre and ballet, and a gifted artist. This exhibition is the first to examine the common thread weaving through Beaton’s work: gardens and flowers.

Photographs, paintings, drawings, costume and set design will explore the role flowers played in developing Cecil Beaton’s creative practice; from the lavish floral installations he created for parties with flowers from his own gardens, to painted and fresh flowers used as backdrops for fashion photography and royal portraits, to the famous floral costumes in My Fair Lady.

Curated by Garden Museum Curator Emma House and designed by artist and designer Luke Edward Hall.

Dates

Entry included in museum admission
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“My garden is the greatest joy of my life, after my friends. Both are worth living for.” - Cecil Beaton, 1979

Cecil Beaton by Cecil Beaton, 1960s © Cecil Beaton Archive, Condé Nast; The Cutting Garden, Cecil Beaton © National Portrait Gallery, London; Bianca Jagger by Cecil Beaton, 1978; 'Black Velvet, Black Braid', by Cecil Beaton at Reddish House for British Vogue, August 1950; People in costume at Cecil Beaton's Ashcombe House for the Fête Champêtre by Cecil Beaton, 1937 © Cecil Beaton Archive, Condé Nast

Tracing Beaton’s horticultural journey through his gardens at Ashcombe House and Reddish House in Wiltshire, the exhibition will include his personal diaries, photographs of friends and family gathering in his gardens, opera and ballet costume sketches and dresses of his own design.


Buy the catalogue

This catalogue accompanying the exhibition includes a foreword by art historian and museum director Sir Roy Strong sharing memories of his lifelong friendship with Beaton, which followed their collaboration on Beaton’s 1968 exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, where Strong was then Director.

An essay by Garden Museum Curator Emma House further explores Beaton’s passion for his gardens, with photographs, paintings, drawings, costume and set designs from the exhibition illustrating the role flowers played in developing his creative practice.

£20

Buy the catalogue