Fine Artist, Sarah Naybour…..The Next Gertrude Jekyll?
Garden Design school thrives nurturing new found talent in
the recession.
Talented new
Oxford College of Garden Design
graduate, Sarah Naybour, has won the prestigious Student Designer Of The Year (2009)
competition.
It’s the second time in four years since the national award was launched by the
UK’s
Society of Garden Designers (SGD)
that a student from the
Oxford College of Garden Design
has won it. This is testament to both the design talents of those winners and the
quality of teaching on the one-year Postgraduate course in Residential Landscape
architecture, widely recognised as the most highly regarded course of it kind.
Notifying Sarah of her win, the judges told her: “Your design was felt by the judges
to be an exciting and dynamic design which related very well to the architecture
of the project, created a contemporary space for the clients to utilise and enjoy
and which very ably fulfilled their brief.”
Sarah who, just like the world-famous English designer,
Gertrude Jekyll,
trained in fine art, and whose career continues to thrive in the midst of an economic
downturn, is quickly establishing herself as “one to watch” in the world of garden
design and is now launching her own garden design business (www.sarahnaybour.co.uk).
She says: “My art background meant that I approached the design from a composition
and proportion perspective. I wanted the art to be part of the garden, not just
plonked there as an after-thought. I designed a white steel pergola in the shape
of an incomplete cube with the underside painted russet and planted in blocks of
colour which was like creating a living painting.”
Duncan Heather,
founder and principal of the
Oxford College of Garden Design,
who is himself an award-winning designer, congratulated his former student, adding:
“Sarah is an enormously talented and very motivated designer with an artistic background
that supports our teaching ethos that garden design is an art form. Heather added:
“It’s interesting that in such difficult times and during a recession, this year
has turned up some of the best creative talent we’ve seen in years.” Sarah, like
many other students changed her career in her mid 40s to focus on launching a creative
design business.
The Oxford College of Garden Design has trained some of the country’s most inspirational
and influential garden designers and a number of those impressive Alumni – including
Luciano Giubbilei,
who is best known for his sharp, minimalist designs - will be returning to Oxford
in 2010 to give a series of Garden Design Master Classes organised by the Oxford
College of Garden Design and open to the public.
According to OCGD principal,
Duncan Heather,
there has never been a better time for people, especially those considering a switch
to a second career, to consider re-training as garden designers.
Recent surveys show a record number of mature adults returning to education this
year with the number of students over the age of 25 up by more than one-fifth in
the last year and more than a quarter of new business set-ups are now started by
people aged between 50 and 65. Between 2001 and 2005, older entrepreneurs created
93,500 news companies, generating 400,000 new jobs and the best news, says Heather,
is that so-called “olderpreneurs” suffer a much lower new business failure rate
than their younger counterparts.
Oxford College of Garden Design
places a firm emphasis on teaching design students the business skills that will
be essential to their long-term survival in a competitive market place and the appointment
of a new Vice Principal, award-winning London-based garden designer, and successful
businesswoman,
Sally Court,
is, adds Heather, a strong sign of that continued commitment to training designers
who will become successful in their own right.