Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British architect Russell Page.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
Montague Russell Page was a British gardener, garden designer and landscape architect. He worked in the UK, western Europe and the United States of America.
Green fingers are the extension of a verdant heart.
A discerning eye needs only a hint, and understatement leaves the imagination free to build its own elaborations.
A garden really lives only insofar as it is an expression of faith, the embodiment of a hope and a song of praise.
There are few gardens that can be left alone. A few years of neglect and only the skeleton of a garden can be traced. . . . Japanese artists working with a few stones and sand four hundred years ago achieved strangely lasting compositions. However there, too, but for the hands that have piously raked the white sand into patterns and controlled the spread of moss and lichens, little would remain.
Garden making, like gardening itself, concerns the relationship of the human being to his natural surroundings.
You'll never have a garden - a garden needs walls and you have no walls.
To plant trees is to give body and life to one's dreams of a better world.
A handful of men working within the Zen sect of Buddhism created gardens in fifteenth-century Japan which were, and still are, far more than merely an aesthetic expression. And what is left of the earlier Mogul gardens in India suggests that their makers were acquainted with what lay behind the flowering of the Sufi movement in High Asia and so sought to add further dimensions to their garden scenes.
I'm tired, it's raining, and I am not a waterlily.
'Green fingers' are a fact, and a mystery only to the unpracticed. But green fingers are the extensions of a verdant heart. A good garden cannot be made by somebody who has not developed the capacity to know and love growing things.
Limitations imply possibilities. A problem is a challenge.
My pre-occupation is with the relationship between objects, whether I am dealing with woods, fields or water, rocks or trees, shrubs and plants, or groups of plants.