IMAGINE
When beginning to create Wallace Gardens, no plan or size or expanse existed in my mind. Unfettered by experience, education or training in anything related to gardens or gardening, my imagination was free to roam. To run wild with mental images of gardens I never knew could exist.
A cornucopia of visions began to overflow from my mind. Too many to be confined to one idea or theme. Remembering Hidcote Garden and the Arts and Crafts style, a series of garden rooms, seemed an ideal way to bring many ideas to life as gardens with different styles, designs, moods, and feelings, each different yet related overall.
Beginning with an idea for only one garden, another idea came, then another and another. I thought of each garden room as a picture, unique and above all interesting. The freedom of imagining injected joy into the creative process.
For each garden room I strove for what was creative, what was interesting, what was unique, what was largely original-- certainly not my version of other gardens. One wants to be the needle in the haystack. Not the haystack.
At this point please understand that just as all music, regardless of style or performance, uses the same notes, chords, rhythms and dynamics, the germs of some ideas might have come from something I had seen or read. But other than the Monet Color Garden, nothing was consciously copied. Much was original with some elements possibly singular in the world.
Conventional wisdom holds that the left side of the brain tends toward quantitative, analytical, logical, and numerical concepts, while the right side tends toward the qualitative, intuitive, creative and artistic areas. This implies the interaction of both sides could create synergy, from a Greek word synergos or synergia, which means "working together."
Applying this theory to creating Wallace Gardens, the quantitative part of the brain created the geometric ground plan beginning with the central main axis, all cross axes at 90* angles, symmetry and a variety of geometric shapes.
The qualitative part of the brain used the main axis through the rooms as the primary vista, the cross axes as paths leading to intriguing places, geometrical shapes within each garden room that seemed to fall into natural patterns, while arrangements of borders and beds and parterres and vertical accents generated rhythm and rhyme to the ground plan.
Wally Marx, an ingenious individual, stepped into the world of gardening at the age of sixty, despite lacking prior gardening experrience. With a successful history in business of bringing new ideas to life, one could argue that, like a Renaissance man, his ability to venture into a new domain was almost second nature.
He'd launched Softsoap, creating the pump soap industry, played a pivotal role in directing the development of market-dominating Pillsbury Pie Crust, and contributed expertise to Clairol's Herbal Essence. No stranger to creataaion, he founded his own marketing research company attracting dozens of the best and biggest clients from Johnson and Johnson to L'Oreal to General Mills.
Retirement, for him, meant transitioning his talent to create Wallace Gardens, a masterpiece. Now, with stories in his own words brought alive through his personal photographs, he invites you to immerse yourself in a world born of passion and boundless creativity.
"Overwhelmed! I do congratulate you on what you have achieved so far with your own horticultural ventures." — HRH Prince Charles
"Extraordinary! What a wonderful garden. It will be significant." — Sir Roy Strong, The Laskett Gardens, Hereford England
"You have a beautiful garden. Monet would be proud." — Derek Fell, author: Secrets of Monet’s Garden, and The Magic of Monet’s Garden
"In maturity it may well stand among the greatest." — Rosamund Wallinger, The Gertrude Jekyll Garden, Upton Grey Hampshire England
"He has taken many elements that have influenced him and melded them into a coherent and beautiful whole to create an American garden of world distinction." — Philip White, CEO Hestercombe Gardens, Somerset England