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Exhibitions / This Lucian Freud belongs on the compost

20 0
12.06.2026

From 1940, at Benton End, near Hadleigh in Suffolk, the artist Cedric Morris brought his eye to breeding irises. Eliminating hated shades of ‘salmon or knicker’, he was, according to his biographer Hugh St Clair, ‘unstinting in his efforts to produce a pure, delicate pink’. Forty years of dedication brought a wild abundance to the garden, which was packed with cultivars, including ‘Benton Baggage’ (pale rose with a blue blaze), ‘Benton Persephone’ (very large white flowers) and ‘Benton Mocha’ (coffee-coloured, with a bright orange beard). A living flower painting. Sacheverell Sitwell saw the tones of ‘vellum, chamois and fuchsia’ – the walls of the half-timbered house were also lime-washed pink – as a 16th-century Japanese scroll, but truly, it was a Cedric Morris.

Lett-Haines’s apple pie used to be served with beak marks that had been made by Morris’s pet jackdaw

Lett-Haines’s apple pie used to be served with beak marks that had been made by Morris’s pet jackdaw

In an infinity loop of cultivation, Morris’s paintings are now being consulted by gardeners working to restore Benton End. The rare flowers were exported widely to gardens such as Sissinghurst, but Benton End itself went to seed after the death of Morris in 1982 and his partner Arthur Lett-Haines........

© The Spectator