A dramatic rock composition frames the view ahead
Despite falling into disrepair and changing hands several times through the centuries, the garden still managed to retain its original close-knit layout. In the central part, there is a large pond that dominates the space and radiating out from this are scattered pavilions, corridors and enclosed courtyard buildings with the eastern part of the garden having residential quarters. Normally, Suzhou gardens were separate from the houses of their masters, so this was a very unusual arrangement.
The garden is approached through a long, shop-lined alley near a busy main road, which presents a striking contrast to the sophistication and beauty of the garden that awaits just a few feet away, its entrance shielded by a screen that heightens the sense of anticipation.
The garden is crammed with a complex series of courtyards, halls, corridors and pavilions; circular openings and strategically placed doorways are used to frame pictures that change with the seasons. An open, spacious courtyard, with a paved brick floor and minimalist rocks and planting, opens into a space where the mood changes completely with a concentration of trees and subdued light filtering in through the feathery foliage.
A series of pathways connects this complex labyrinth, fitted together like an intricate jigsaw, all leading, by different routes, to the central pond or lake and to its Pavilion of the Clouds and Moon. As one walks down the paths, it is as if a scroll landscape painting is unfolding in three-dimensional form — so many superimposed layers, a series of contrasts, the yin and yang of artfully placed elements and structures, a density that belies the size of the plot that contains within it all the mystery and magic of a historical Chinese garden.
The writer is a garden designer qualified from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, London
Published in Dawn, EOS, December 30th, 2018