RHS Chatsworth Show aims to 'break the mould'
- Published
The first new Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) show in a decade will "break the mould" of Chelsea and allow "revolutionary" designs to take centre stage, organisers say.
The show at Chatsworth, a Derbyshire stately home, will have eight "freeform" gardens, RHS said.
"Chelsea is a big event crammed into a small site - we'll have more freedom," Chatsworth's Steve Porter said.
"Predictability is being thrown out of the window," he added.
Palladian bridge
The RHS Chatsworth Show will run from 7-11 June and up to 80,000 visitors are expected.
Three new temporary pontoon bridges will be built across the River Derwent as part of the show to allow visitors to access displays on both sides.
All three will float on the water, with one being designed in classic Palladian style with a flower display inside it.
RHS spokesman Liz Patterson said artists of all genres including sculptors and visual artists will take part.
One installation, called The Wordless Cupboard, has two 3-metre high cubes and a "landslide of glacial boulders" that are meant to evoke "the oppression of powerlessness".
A garden designed by landscape architecture students from Leeds Beckett University called the Path of Least Resistance will include weeds and wildflowers in "an urban wasteland".
Moveable Feast is a garden for the "Rent Generation" who want something that will move with them when they move from house to house.
"The sheer scale of the location, with the River Derwent running through it, allows designers to "break the mould and do something slightly different" Ms Patterson said.
"Our aim is to create a new show that champions the horticultural innovation of today and the future, and encourages exhibitors to be progressive and think outside the box," RHS director of shows Nick Mattingley added.
- Published13 March 2014
- Published9 September 2013