Every suburban garden must have its greensward – but artists are creating plantations of their own to question the colonialism, sterility and capitalist logic behind the lawn

This summer, the grass was not greener on the other side of the fence. In fact, there was no green grass so far as the eye could see, as heatwaves and drought turned our lush lawns into barren wastelands.

A quintessential feature in western gardens and landscaping, the lawn is at the centre of controversy. Its formal homogeneity and neatness imply reliability and constancy, and elicit our trust. And yet its unquenchable thirst for fertilisers, weedkillers and water, and inhospitality to wildlife, have attracted criticism and even spurred an anti-lawn movement in the US.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Angry Premier League clubs demand emergency meeting on Newcastle deal

Other 19 clubs united in opposition to Newcastle takeover Clubs concerned Premier…

‘I promised Brando I would not touch his Oscar’: the secret life of Sacheen Littlefeather

In 1973, she made history at the Academy Awards, appearing in place…

SSE will be hard to bully given the arithmetic and political backing | Nils Pratley

Energy company has the detail and renewables flag-waving to counter hedge fund’s…

Thunderstorms sweep across UK but temperatures stay high

Met Office warns of heavy showers and some flooding in England, Wales,…