The last time I visited Brighton I stayed the weekend with my friend Richard. He lived in Brunswick Place in a top floor flat. Unhappily, the weekend did not go well. However on Sunday we walked into the centre of Brighton the back way, along Landsdown Rd etc., avoiding the vile Western Avenue. At the far end we paused for me to take some pictures of the somewhat eccentric Gothick Wykeham Terrace - all grey and white stucco and pinnacles - when a first floor window opened and voiced called out 'I'm ready for close-up now, Mr DeMille.' He, Michael, then invited us in, at one point leaving us - two strangers - alone in his sitting room while he went downstairs to the kitchen. The sitting-room was 'pure' Late Sixties/Early Seventies - white painted Gothic book shelves and a lime green carpet. It was all rather stylish. He returned some minutes later with some headed note paper and an invitation to tea sometime. I remember him announcing that at one time he 'had Roy Strong on one side of me and Flora Robson and her sisters on the other.' Or words to that effect.
Sadly I never returned for tea, and never saw Michael or Richard again. I wish I had, particularly Michael as he was a hoot and I was keen to record his house, but that weekend spelt the end of my friendship with Richard. We last spoke at the beginning of lockdown, but alas, I think Richard must of died during those grim months.
This has turned out to be a less than cheerful introduction to a post about a couple of books by Sir Roy Strong, or as they used to call him in Private Eye, Dr Strange, than intended. However it is just about the only anecdote about the man, so it will have to do.
Roy Strong is a bit of National Treasure. Quite the Renaissance man: scholar, curator, writer (Author of some 43 (!) books, some in collaboration with his late wife, the designer Julia Trevelyan Oman), garden designer and maker, aesthete, dandy and habitue of the Beau Monde. And I must say I'm a fan. His first volume of published diaries 'The Roy Strong Diaries 1967-1987' is quite one of my favourite books and along with 'A Chequered Past' by Peter Schlesinger opens a window on the fascinating, now long vanished, interlocking worlds of Bohemia and the Beau Monde in Late Sixties/Early Seventies London. A world essentially ended by the Oil Crisis of 1973.
Therefore imagine my excitement when the bf announces he's found a cache of Strong's books for sale at Aberglasney. After some toing and froing I ended up with these five books. The books that interest me most are the autobiographical 'Roy Strong: Self portrait as a young man', 2013, and the 'The Renaissance Garden in England' 0f 1978 & 1998. (This is the paperback 1998 edition)
'Roy Strong: Self Portrait as a Young Man' fleshes out part of that period covered in 'The Roy String Diaries'. It is fascinating, partly because my own background shares some similarities with his - lower middle class and living in a 'semi', though I didn't actually live in suburbia, but (as I've said before) in a small market town in Lincolnshire. I suspect that our tastes, and attitudes, are pretty much the same: 'a committed Royalist; an Oxford Movement Christian; a lover of Old England, its great houses, churches and landscape; in short, at this stage of my life, a prototype of the later Young Fogeys, conservative by instinct and not at all an Angry Young Man of the Colin Wilson/John Osbourne variety.' (All that said, I suspect that Osbourne was probably more culturally conservative than assumed at the time.)
At times this book reads like an Evelyn Waugh novel with our hero ascending the 'greasy pole' from Winchmore Hill in Enfield to Keeper of the National Portrait gallery at 32 and eventually Director of the V&A at 38. If I remember rightly from the Diaries enjoying some very long lunches in the process and all the while encountering a whole flight personalities and eccentrics in the process, often immensely talented and but tragically flawed: the critic and exhibition maestro Dickie Buckle, and the artist Astrid Zydower spring to mind. There is wonderful photograph - very 'Sixties' - of Buckle, Strong and Buckle's assistant, Joe Predera. They are standing amidst the chaos of the hang for the ground breaking Cecil Beaton exhibition of 1968. Buckle looks like he's nicked his shirt from a production of Swan Lake, giving him the look a particularly robust but brassy barmaid. It seems to sum up a whole era.
'The Renaissance Garden in England' is one of Strong's more academic works, a very 'Warburg Institute'* book, showing the influence of Strong's Phd tutor at the Warburg, Dame Frances Yates. Yates (1899-1981) was another of those eccentric figures in Strong's live, a historian whose field of study was the Renaissance esoteric tradition; her published books such as 'Giordano Bruni and the Hermetic Tradition', and 'The Rosicrucian Enlightenment', reflect this. Rather like the other books I have mentioned in this post it sheds light on a lost world, for very few of the gardens discussed in this book actually survive. A world of great formal gardens full of symbolism and allegory, of grottos and mechanical wonders, places where the esoteric and the scientific were not yet estranged.
Given that dearth of source materials ie gardens, Strong relies on written descriptions and contemporaneous paintings, drawings and prints. Quite fascinating those prints in themselves. Only one Hollar, but there are a small number taken from the wonderful 'Britannia Illustrata' of 1709. In addition there is a liberal sprinkling of poetry of the period. The result of all this is a rich, polymathic, satisfying bricolage of a book, the design of which appears to me, at least, to be heavily influenced by Mark Girouard's books such as 'Robert Smythson and the Elizabethan House' which were designed by Girouard's wife Dorothy.
* The Warburg Institute is part of the University of London. It was originally established in Hamburg in 1909. In 1933, with the rise of the Nazi Party to power in Germany, the Institute was relocated to London.