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    PostHeaderIcon The News

    PostHeaderIcon TopiaryGolfer Theft

    Saturday, 23 January 2010 09:55 | Author: Administrator | PDF Print E-mail

    A 6ft tall topiary bush in the shape of a golfer about to hit a ball has been dug up and stolen from a golf club in East Sussex.

    It had been imported from Italy and had only been in place at the Sweetwoods Park club, in Holtye, for six weeks.

    The unique work of art was stolen overnight between 9 and 10 January.

    Police believe several people would have been needed to dig up the bush, and lift it over the perimeter fence of the golf club.

    Neil Crittenden, the head green keeper, said the topiary, which is worth about £1,000, had been planted into a container which was dug into the ground at the entrance to the club.

    "All the members loved it and it was a nice piece. It's sad to see it go," he said, adding that a reward was on offer for its safe return. 

    Last Updated (Saturday, 23 January 2010 09:56)

     

    PostHeaderIcon Topiary blooms in Baghdad

    Sunday, 15 November 2009 19:16 | Author: Administrator | PDF Print E-mail

    BAGHDAD — Khalil Abbas has worked with plants since he was 7 years old, and his tree nursery could be a barometer of Iraq’s changing fortunes. During the 1970s, when Iraqis enjoyed a flood of oil money, customers flocked to him to supply elaborate gardens, buying plants imported from Jordan and Syria, Mr. Abbas said. Then after the American invasion of 2003, business came to a halt.

    Khalil Abbas says people come to his nursery from all over Baghdad and the rest of Iraq now that security has improved.

    “When the situation was dangerous, people from other neighborhoods were unable to come here, and we couldn’t go there,” he said.

    On a recent morning Mr. Abbas, 58, sat in an office that was surrounded by sicus palms, ficus trees, gardenias, fruit trees and other plants. As security has improved, he said, people have been buying plants again, coming to the nursery in the Jadriya neighborhood not only from other parts of Baghdad but also from around the country. Business has multiplied eightfold since 2005, including brisk sales in small sicus palms, which cost about $350.

    “A lot of people are getting money from the government,” he said, “so it’s not just embassies buying. Now regular people buy as well.”

    Gardens remain one of the few flourishes of public ornament on Baghdad’s otherwise brown streets, defiant displays of foliage amid concrete blast walls and security checkpoints. And in its middle-class neighborhoods, Baghdad is a city of surprising topiary sculptures: leafy ficus trees are carved in geometric spirals, balls, arches and squares, as if to impose order on a chaotic sprawl. The trees provide a startling counterpoint of color and contour to the uniformly tan and rectilinear houses and walls surrounding them.

    “This is our kingdom, our home,” said Mohammed al-Khalidy, an electrical engineer, standing in his garden, where ficus trees carved like deconstructed snowmen flank the street.

    Mr. Khalidy has worked for American agencies, and he said that as a result he had received death threats and that three cars had been destroyed at his home. His windows still bear masking tape X’s, to prevent them from shattering easily.

    “This is where we have our relaxation,” he said, speaking English. “There is no safe location where we can go.”

    Even during the high periods of sectarian violence, he said, he and his family entertained guests in the garden. “Of course,” he said. “What can we do?”

    During the worst years, he said, it was difficult to buy plants, so the family used clippings to fill out the garden. Even when car bombs were exploding in the neighborhood, his mother insisted on watering the garden daily. “We didn’t change,” he said.

    For Falah Mohammed, standing beneath a massive topiary arch by his driveway, the improved security in Baghdad has brought its own problem: he cannot find a gardener with enough time to take care of his trees. His quiet street is lined with neat gardens.

    “The gardener used to come every day,” said Mr. Mohammed, who runs a flour factory. “Now he only comes two times a month because he has too much work.”

    Mr. Mohammed said he never had trouble getting plants, because he lived near enough to Mr. Abbas’s nursery. But the costs of maintaining his garden have risen.

    “Before, it was very cheap, $10 a visit,” he said. “Now he’s asking $100 to come two times a month.”

    Topiaries are not traditional in Iraq, said Salwa Nori, an agricultural engineer and garden designer. She said that she closed her business for two years during the violent times, but that since late 2006 it has been growing.

    “It comes from Europe or wherever people travel, and they bring it back,” she said. “And now it comes from the Internet and satellite channels.”

    Though Iraqis began experimenting with topiary gardens in the 1990s, they have become popular only in recent years, and only in wealthy neighborhoods.

    “Right now, the provinces are getting interested, it’s not just the capital,” Ms. Nori said. Still, she said, even in Baghdad, “There are a lot of beautiful gardens but the people are out of the country” because of the violence.

    On a battered street in the middle-class neighborhood of Zayouna, Muhi Mohammed Hussein trimmed an elaborate plant sculpture in the shape of an eagle in front of his home. Flanking it were bushes shaped like corkscrews, flowers and straw baskets, which he said took him four or five months to create using wire frames to form the shapes.

    When sectarian violence was at its peak, he said, people in Baghdad were not interested in his work, so he left for Dubai and the northern city of Erbil. But now there is a place in Baghdad for his creations, he said.

    “Iraq has suffered for a long time, so now I’m trying to give a smile back to Iraq with beautiful plants,” he said.

    For Mazen Hammad, who works for the Ministry of Health, his garden was a refuge from the violence. Mr. Hammad talked among hedges carved like the battlements of a castle.

    “When the situation was bad, I took care of the garden more than when it’s good,” he said. “When you take care of the garden, you forget the war. But when the situation is good, you’re too busy with work.”

    Mr. Abbas, who runs the nursery, said a recent trend was for people to buy seedlings, intending to carve their names into the leaves when the trees grow up. Iraq’s topiary gardens, he said, are just beginning.

    Not far from his nursery, the wrecked frame of a building testified to the effects of a car bomb, but amid his trees Mr. Abbas was serene. Still, he said, he does not like to see a beautiful tree overshadowed by an ugly concrete blast wall. “It’s a big disaster,” he said.

    Joao Silva for The New York Times
     

    PostHeaderIcon Topiary Comes Alive and Walks!

    Tuesday, 11 August 2009 07:23 | Author: Bozena | PDF Print E-mail
    Topiary Comes Alive and Walks!
    Have you ever seen some topiary so well crafted that you think it could come alive at any minute? Well with this particular piece you can be forgiven for your thoughts - "The Living Topiary" is the latest creation from madcap performance group The Living Statue Company.
    "We started off wanting to create a costume that would be fun and surprising for garden parties," explains artistic director Ed Johnson "Gradually the idea grew about making a topiary suit that a performer could wear and disguise himself amongst the plants at an event."
    The idea was easy part - nearly 300 hours of painstaking sewing using plastic boxwood leaves went in to making each of the two costumes now available for hire, "There were a few points when we thought about giving up, our fingers were red raw and there seemed to be no end to the costumes."
    But the finished result was worth the wait. Looking exactly like real topiary the performer stands perfectly still like a living statue. When guests have arrived and settled he bursts into life to amuse and entertain them with a collection of slapstick routines.
    "We're taken aback by the popularity of these costumes, we weren't sure if people would get the joke but people just love it. We've been performing as traditional style living statues for many years now and this is something new and refreshing to add to our collection of characters. We just have to be nervous when someone approaches with a pair of shears!"
    They certainly would have to worry about their 'privet' parts! To find out more about the Living Topiary costumes or to take a look at the impressive range of Human Statues on offer visit The Living Statue Company's website at http://www.thelivingstatuecompany.com/ to find out more.

    Last Updated (Sunday, 16 August 2009 12:02)

     

    PostHeaderIcon Beijing Topiary

    Tuesday, 14 July 2009 10:59 | Author: Administrator | PDF Print E-mail
    Stunning Topiary Gardens created for the Beijing Olympics:
     

    Last Updated (Tuesday, 14 July 2009 11:01)

     

    PostHeaderIcon Topiary elephants in the garden

    Tuesday, 14 July 2009 10:15 | Author: Administrator | PDF Print E-mail

    GAVIN HOGG was worried his garden was becoming a jungle so he turned it into a herd of elephants.

    elephant topiaryThe hedge outside his kitchen window had grown wild when the 49-year-old took it to task.

    With a hedge-trimmer, shears and even a pair of scissors he carefully carved out seven adult elephants and three babies.

    And the unique topiary hedge has become a tourist attraction outside his home in Brecon.

    Mr Hogg, 49, fell in love with the wildlife during a safari in Kenya that when he returned home he decided to recreate a little bit of Africa in his back garden.

    It took two days to craft the herd and the result is a striking 100ft-long trail of green elephants that stretches around the corner of his family home outside Brecon in Mid Wales.

    Mr Hogg said: "It was just a normal, fairly boring box hedge when I started. I found a picture of a group of elephants and set about shaping it. Time seemed to disappear while I was working on it.

    "I was able to create the appearance of folds in the skin and shadow lines for shoulder blades and hips.

    "I also clipped an eye in some of the adult elephants to give it greater authenticity. It was a lot of work and the ears and trunks were a bit tricky but I am pleased with the end result."

    Mr Hogg and his wife Vina, who have two children, farm organic vegetables at their 17th century home.

    He added: "It's great to see our own herd of elephants every time we look out of the window, even if they are green. They will need a haircut twice a year to smarten them up. But they will be a permanent feature."

    The topiary elephants are cut out of a hedge of common box (Buxus sempervirens) which was planted about 200 years ago.

    Last Updated (Tuesday, 14 July 2009 10:44)

     
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