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Dr Laura Meyer

Garden Historian Career Profile

Freelance writer, researcher and lecturer Dr Laura Mayer shares how she 'fell' into garden history

Falling into gardens

It is fair to say I quite literally fell into garden history, and owing to my infamously impractical footwear, have continued to fall over in a variety of gardens ever since – possibly most spectacularly sliding down the Vale of Venus at Rousham into a pile of wet leaves.

My undergraduate degree was a joint honours in Spanish and History of Art, which involved spending a year in Andalucía (a tough gig, but somebody had to do it). During this time I worked initially on the Alhambra Palace in Granada, before the paradise gardens of the Generalife lured me outside. After a few years working in London auction houses, I went on to complete the MA in Garden History at Bristol University, followed by a PhD in eighteenth-century patronage, which focused on the Grand Tour and gentleman’s drinking clubs. This allowed me to combine a love of art, architecture and travel with my new found passion for garden history.

Writer, researcher, lecturer

My top tip for anybody who wants to work in the garden history field would be to prepare to be adaptable!

I have worked as a freelance writer, researcher and lecturer for thirteen years now, and in that time have taught academically, as well as for continuing education and professional development. I have written and co-written books, published articles and magazine pieces, designed stamps for the Royal Mail and dragged jetlagged tourists around landscape parks in the pouring rain. However, the work I particularly enjoy is conservation-related research, as nothing beats an archival break-through, and the feeling of personally contributing something, however small, to the future and understanding of a historic site. This leads me to another piece of advice; namely, acquaint yourself with the myriad of research resources available, and hone your analytical skills, essential for interpretating both historical plans and on-site archaeological evidence.

Approaching garden history from many paths

Personally, I wish I had undertaken more practical, on-the-job experience as a student, because my plant knowledge is best described as a work in progress…! 

Still, what always draws me back to the subject is that you can approach it from so many different paths – garden history is an inherently interdisciplinary field. There are, therefore, opportunities for art and architectural historians, horticulturalists and botanists, practical gardeners and landscape designers, archaeologists, geographers, philosophers, conservationists and ecologists. We need all these pieces of the puzzle to come together in order to better  appreciate and conserve our gardens and green spaces world-wide.

Dr Laura Meyer

The last in our online course A History of Gardens 3, on Tues@10 am. Sponsored by Wooden Books.

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