Russell Page’s designs for a garden at Giza in Egypt include not only plans for areas of trees, flowers and lawns but drawings for a fountain and a garden pavilion, both of which incorporate the arabesque forms of Islamic architecture.
Property belonging to Mohamed Sultan, Giza, Egypt
1948
Archive of Garden Design Ref: RP/1/21/1
When Russell Page was asked to design this garden in Giza in 1948, he already knew Egypt well. From 1943 to 1944 he had been stationed in Cairo, having been recruited by the Political Warfare Department during the Second World War (he worked mainly on propaganda). In his introduction to The Education of a Gardener, Page evocatively described his time there:
‘In the Gizeh zoological gardens, a nineteenth-century extravagance in the form of a romantic park made by the Khedive Ismail, was a magnificent collection of trees and plants, all new to me, also a series of serpentine ponds thick with lotus, loveliest of all aquatic plants. As to the fauna, what I remember best was the lustrous slate-grey plumage of the saturnine-looking shoebill, a rare wader from Upper Sudan, and a pale pink seagull. In Cairo itself there were all the marvellous mosques to explore and sometimes I would sit quietly in one of them listening to a sheikh chanting verses from the Koran – every sound vibrant with meaning and devotion. In Cairo in those days there were still traces of a more frivolous and charming architecture: palaces, kiosks and fountains in the Turkish rococo manner which dated from the early nineteenth century.’ (36)
Both a kiosk (also referred to as a pavilion) and a fountain are incorporated into Page’s design for Mohammed Sultan’s garden. The drawings for these are beautiful; a reminder that Page originally trained as an artist at the Slade in the 1920s. He looked to the local architecture as a guide, making particular reference to the Manial Palace on Rhoda Island on the Nile. Their final positions within the gardens – which wrapped in a horse-shoe shape around the house – ensured both the kiosk and fountain were focal points. Perhaps not surprising given Page’s love of water in the garden, the fountain was eventually placed directly in line with the rear entrance of the house, to be viewed across an expanse of lawn (as seen in RP/1/21/1/4). Smaller garden areas, with beds of flowers and tree groves, radiated off this central lawn so that a series of separate rooms was created.
It was one of the projects which Page undertook whilst working in partnership with the Vilmorin company, the Paris-based seed producers active since the 18th century. Page had been invited by his long-standing friend André de Vilmorin to join forces with his family’s firm after the Second World War.
Literature
Page, Russell. The Education of a Gardener. Harvill, 1994.