It took a while to find Brief, the garden designed by the Sri Lankan writer and artist, Bevis Bawa, in 1929. There was no obvious signpost on the main road, so asking directions, I turned off onto a small side road in a bid to locate it. This put me in a landscape dense with tropical greenery, littered with coconut palm groves. Here and there, flashes of red and peach hibiscus flowers and the flaming leaves of tall croton bushes made startling splashes of colour in the monochromatic green of the jungle-like foliage until I finally came upon the missing sign.
Driving down a long, narrow pathway lined with sealing wax palms — their red, distinctive barks acting as beacons — I finally arrived at the iron-grill gates of Brief. Laid out on five acres of land surrounding the house near Bentota on Sri Lanka’s west coast, the garden was an ongoing project for Bevis who continued to work on it until close to his death in 1992.
The low-slung house is set amidst the gardens and surrounded by vegetation, so that through the large, open doors and windows and across from the west-facing veranda that catches the breeze, you see towering trees, clumps of tall bamboo stands and masses of heliconias with their brightly-coloured bracts. It is a rich, green tapestry, tightly knotted together and accented with pinpoints of colour.
The gardens are terraced and were landscaped gradually, over a period of time, as a series of different spaces so that each space has a different mood. There is the tranquility of a grassed area with a round pond that, with its stone surround, sits naturally against a backdrop of towering trees and in another space, flights of steps leading one up, creating movement and mystery in anticipation of what’s to come. Scattered throughout the garden and furnishing it are sculptures, urns, ponds, terraces and cascades.
Lush, tropical havens on Sri Lanka’s west coast
Walking through the garden in steaming humidity, the greenery threatens to take over and there is an overpowering feeling that the garden will soon revert to jungle, if left untended. The atmosphere is animated by the sounds of hundreds of birds, its spaces and enclosures looking out to artfully borrowed views of the countryside beyond to create an illusory sense of a vast space.