About 40 years in the past, the gate was closed on a backyard in Suffolk that had been a magnet for a sure form of particular person: if you happen to had been an artist, poet, flaneur, composer, or freewheeling gardener or cook dinner, you might have discovered your self sitting across the eating room desk at a fairly uncommon artwork college referred to as Benton Finish. It was run by two urbane males, former stars of the artwork world in London and Paris, Arthur Lett-Haines (“Lett”) and Cedric Morris. In a crumbling Elizabethan mini manor, Lett did the cooking and Cedric did the gardening—in addition to gathering crops from lengthy winter holidays round southern and jap Europe and introducing and naming specimens which might be standard in the present day. It’s his irises, nonetheless, cross-pollinated with a paintbrush and steered into colorways that may solely be described as “midcentury British,” which have gained him cult standing.
After 4 many years of exercise, Lett and Cedric died, and Benton Finish was offered, the backyard left to slumber for an additional 4 many years. Throughout that point, Cedric Morris’ standing as a painter of flowers and landscapes gained appreciable momentum (costs have tripled and even quadrupled for the reason that Backyard Museum placed on a present of his work with the Philip Mould Gallery in 2018). And his iris hybrids have turn out to be almost not possible to amass. It’s on this ambiance of Cedric-centric pleasure, which exhibits no signal of abating, that the backyard at Benton Finish has been revived, after a pair of philanthropists with imaginative and prescient purchased the property when it got here up on the market and part-gifted it to the Backyard Museum.
This previous Saturday, we went alongside to the opening celebration.
Pictures by India Hobson.

After the donation, the Backyard Museum’s then-head gardener Matt Collins moved in and started to unearth treasures within the walled backyard through the pandemic. There have been hints of life within the persevering with presence of shrubs that Cedric launched, together with Euphorbia wulfenii, and a sprawling silverberry, now often called Eleagnus ‘Quicksilver’.














