22 Apr 2026
01 Nov 2026

FESTIVAL INTERNATIONAL DES JARDINS

Domaine de Chaumont-sur-Loire

Gardens are places of memories, seasonality, presentation and emotion. Both real and symbolic, they provide a stage for taming, tidying and cultivating nature – without ever entirely controlling it. For the great art of time, spectacle and storytelling that is cinema, gardens serve as a partner that delivers a level of aesthetics and poetics rarely found elsewhere. The theme of the upcoming International Garden Festival : The Garden the star of the show, encourages visitors to explore the formal, narrative and symbolic connections between these two arts.

 

Gardens have been used as film sets ever since cinema first began. Filming in these sorts of settings is never neutral. It is inherently emotionally charged, harbouring incredible theatrical potential. From bucolic scenes to moments of terror, from childhood locales to fantasy lands, gardens can be a refuge or a trap, a utopia or an initiation, a paradise or an allegory.

 

What cinema shares with the art of the garden is that same focus on perspectives, lines and flow. Both organise and structure space to steer the viewer’s gaze. Gardens are staged with the intention of being roamed, and sequences of film shots with the intention of being read. In both cases, movement creates an implicit narrative. Gardens can thus be conceived as a cinematographic tool, a moving scene where light, rhythm and matter all coherently interlink in time.

 

A number of filmmakers have turned gardens into far more than merely a set: Vittorio De Sica’s The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (1970), Agnieszka Holland’s The Secret Garden (1993) and Miyazaki’s My Neighbor Totoro (1988), just to name a few.

 

The concept of time is another good reason for drawing parallels between cinema and the art of the garden. Gardens grow and transform, following the seasons and at the mercy of the elements. Cinema, meanwhile, plays around with multiple dimensions of time, expanding it, condensing it, fragmenting it and rewinding it! Filming in a garden is thus an act of adding a sense of moving, evolving temporality to an image, of capturing the slow development of the living world. Derek Jarman made a garden the central theme in The Garden (1990), as did Peter Greenaway in The Draughtman’s Contract (1982).

 

Beyond evoking all these films, The Garden the star of the show encourages visitors to consider gardens as a narrative tool that links sequences (parterres, paths, flower beds, groves…), creates transitions (fences, thresholds, doorways) and regulates intensity (light and shade, empty and full spaces). Landscape gardeners, much like filmmakers, create a sequential, polyphonic oeuvre in which visitors become active audience members. Gilles Clément refers to gardens as ‘writing in motion’, as ‘living screenplays’, while Bernard Lassus sees landscapes unfolding like a film or a strip of images.

 

The creators for this edition of the event have thus been invited to think of their space as a cinematographic oeuvre, to conjure up a unique aesthetic evoking one of the genres of the 7th art or a particular cult film. They have been directly inspired by scenes from collective memory, while still upholding the botanical, aesthetic and environmental requirements essential to Chaumont-sur-Loire. They will be able to play around with light, soundtracks, paths and elements of surprise, transforming the garden into a three-dimensional screen, a place of sensory projection, encouraging audiences to be part of the film, each garden having been conceived as a sequence to follow, a scene to inhabit, a film to dream about.

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Domaine de Chaumont-sur-Loire
41150 Chaumont-sur-Loire
Tél. : 02 54 20 99 22

www.domaine-chaumont.fr

CONTACT

Caroline Vaisson
caroline.vaisson@finnpartners.com