08 February 2025

Edna Walling's stunning garden designs

Edna Margaret Walling (1895-1973) was born in York, second daughter of William and Harriet Walling. Edna studied at the Convent of Notre Dame in Devon, enjoying exploring with dad and the practical arts. Arriving in New Zealand in 1912 with her family, she began a nursing course at Christchurch. About 1914 the Wallings moved to Melbourne where William became a warehouse director.

Encouraged by her mother, Edna studied at School of Horticulture Burnley, gaining a graduate certificate in Dec 1917. She then began work as a jobbing gardener around Melbourne. Asked by an architect to plan a garden, she loved the idea. More commissions came and by the 1920s she had built a successful practice in garden design. She developed a sophisticated style,attracting an equally sophisticated clientele, and rapidly became the leading exponent of the art in Victoria at first, then spread to other states. Her regular gardening columns (1926-46) in Australian Home Beautiful and other magazines extended her influence.

Mawarra in Sherbrooke, designed in 1932
Dandenong Ranges Photography

To some extent, Walling emulated the styles of Spanish and Italian gardens and the work of Sir Edwin Lutyens and Gertrude Jekyll in Britain. The gardens she created typically exhibited a strong architectural character. For clients in the wealthy suburbs of Melbourne and on country estates, her designs included grand architectural features: walls, pergolas, stairs, parterres, pools and colonnades—woven into a formal geometry. And she always found a space for a wild, unstructured section.

For clients with more modest means, Walling's approach was more relaxed, relying on curving lawns and garden beds to give the illusion of greater space. But rarely were there no stone walls or other structural features. Whether the garden was big or small, she created a succession of pictures. Her handling of space, contour, level and view was brilliant. Equally impressive was her mastery of plants and their visual and ecological relationships. Her gardens were clothed by a soft and consistent palette of plants. She favoured greens and used other colours sparingly, mostly in pastel tones or white. For many clients she produced an exquisite water-colour plan of the garden as a means of conveying her proposals. Most of her gardens were constructed by Eric Hammond. Walling often provided the plants from her own nursery and was frequently on site giving instructions and helping with the physical labour. 

Edna Walling's iconic 1920s landscape design, Sherbrooke 
Heritage listed, Facebook

In the early 1920s Walling had acquired land at Mooroolbark where she built a house for herself, known as Sonning. Here she lived and worked, establishing her nursery and gathering around her a group of like-minded people for whom she designed picturesque 'English' cottages and gardens. She named the area Bickleigh Vale village. Some people rather unkindly called it Trouser Lane because of the dress of its predominantly female residents. The village was, and remains, an extraordinary experiment in urban development. In Walling's lifetime, and beyond, it has become a place of pilgrimage for her many followers. She designed several other group-housing estates. One, at Mount Kembla in NSW, was built for Broken Hill Associated Smelters Pty Ltd. Others remained on paper.

By the 1940s Walling's was a household name and she capitalised on her popularity by publishing four successful books: Gardens in Australia (1943); Cottage and Garden in Australia (1947); A Gardener's Log (1948); and The Australian Roadside (1952). A further monograph, On the Trail of Australian Wildflowers, appeared posthumously in 1984. Several more manuscripts were unpublished.

Her influence on C20th gardening in Australia was enormous. The visual impact of the hundreds of gardens she created, her extensive writing, and the respect she commanded from those with whom she worked, including Glen Wilson, Ellis Stones and Eric Hammond, had a considerable effect on the next generation. In the 1980s and 1990s she was to become almost a cult figure for many Australian gardeners and a number of books were published about her work.

The Edna Walling Book of Australian Garden Design,
by Anne O'Donovan, 1980

In the mid-1940s Walling had developed a particular interest in native plants; she had begun using them in domestic gardens in the 1920s. An early and active conservationist, she joined battles to protect the natural environment and crusaded for the preservation of indigenous roadside vegetation. She was an outstanding photographer who always took her camera on her extensive travels. Classical music was another of her passions.

Miss Walling was not a person to be taken lightly. On site, dressed in her customary jodhpurs, jacket and tie, with strong, handsome features, she was energetic, determined and demanding. These character traits often provoked conflict, especially with some of her wealthy male clients. Yet she was also generous, fun loving and good company, attracting many loyal admirers and friends. By 1967, tiring of the characterless suburbs advancing towards Bickleigh Vale, she moved to Buderim, Queensland, to be in a warmer climate and near to her niece Barbara Barnes. Always single, Walling maintained a close relationship with Lorna Fielden, a teacher forwhom she had designed a house and garden at Bickleigh Vale. Fielden also moved to Buderim. 

Edna Walling, book cover of
The Unusual Life of Edna Walling, by Sara Hardy

Walling died in 1973 at Nambour and was cremated with Christian Scientist rituals.





32 comments:

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels, Usually I admire the architecture of old houses, without bothering too much about the gardens, as by now most original gardens of early houses have disappeared. However, I was immediately taken by the quality and attractiveness of Walling's landscapes; they seem to be just what I admire. If I were to build a large house and garden now, I would definitely study her existing gardens and books of plans.
--Jim

roentare said...

It is remarkable to discover that she possessed a diverse range of skills and talents prior to discovering her true vocation in the realm of garden design.

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

What an interesting woman

Homes To Love said...

Inside an 80-year-old garden designed by Edna Walling
For four generations, a grazing family in Victoria’s western district has nurtured this Edna Walling garden. 80+ years have passed since Walling, commissioned by the Youngman family, visited the property, and it is fascinating to see both the garden’s plan and the mature reality. Ardgartan near Hamilton is particularly special as it is one of only a handful of gardens that retain strong elements of Edna Walling’s original ideas.

peppylady (Dora) said...

I also enjoy garden.

River said...

She did create some beautiful gardens. I leafed through a book of hers in a library once.

Margaret D said...

Often males design gardens so it's a good change to have a female do it.
Talented lady.

jabblog said...

Designing and implementing gardens must be a wonderful occupation. Imagine having carte blanche over tracts of land.

Hels said...

Parnassus
I am assuming Australians pay more attention to their gardens than other people because we try to spend as much time as possible outside. For the six hottest months of the year, lots of meals and parties are held outside because a] the weather is lovely and b] the gardens are more attractive than inside the house.
However I believe more young couples are moving into flats these days, and more elderlies are moving into retirement villages. So if families want a friendly garden, they will have to move to the outer suburbs or nearby rural areas.

Hels said...

roentare
I don't suppose it was easy being an energetic and ambitious young woman at the turn of the century, but Edna was well supported by her parents. Even her great role model in Britain, garden designer Gertrude Jekyll, was a fine source of intellectual and feminist support.

Hels said...

Jo-Anne
I find talented women who dedicated themselves to their careers, rather than marrying having babies and doing the washing and ironing, were very interesting! She had a lot of great women friends, but even so, becoming a garden architect was an unusual life choice for a woman.

Hels said...

Homes To Love

Many thanks. I read "An Edna Walling designed cottage garden in Victoria". This garden in Victoria’s north-west was lovingly restored to its former glory to honour landscape designer Edna Walling. And as you say, the influence Edna Walling has survived in many of the gardens she designed for country homesteads and cottages in Victoria’s Western District.

Hels said...

peppylady
I love walking in gardens, picnicking on a blanket, cutting flowers for the dining room table, picking fruit and even weeding. But I don't do any of the hard labour eg chopping tree branches.

Hels said...

River
because Edna was also a fine photographer who always took her camera when visiting her gardens, her books were beautifully presented. You did well :)

Hels said...

Margaret
Edna was talented and ambitious, which shocked men a bit. But worse still from the men's perspective, Edna was perceived as quite inflexible in her decision making. For example when Edna became an early advocate of native plants, she dropped the birches!!

Hels said...

jabblog
absolutely so. The further out into the distant suburbs and rural towns Edna's clients went, the more land she had to design according to her dreams.
I know she believed a garden should require low-maintenance, but her clients were presumably wealthy enough to buy the large land tracts and to pay for maintenance staff.

thelma said...

She reminds me of Vita Sackville-West. But gardening was a good choice for a woman determined to have a job and also that she wanted to protect the wild plants.

hels said...

Thelma
The two women had a lot in common. They were both British, both born in the early 1890s and both passionate garden designers. And I loved Sissinghurst gardens.

Andrew said...

She was a marvellous character. Trouser Lane, haha.
Sophisticated style? Such as throwing a heap of potatoes onto some land and planting birch trees where they landed.

My name is Erika. said...

I'd love to see some of her gardens. And garden design is an art too, and from what you posted I think she had a lot of talent too. I see I missed another post so I'm off to read that.

Hels said...

Erika
Garden design is not just an art like a painting or a diamond tiara; rather it is a large expanse that needs to be examined in the long view, as well as looking at each plant separately. So google "the gardens Edna Walling designed" and see beautiful closeups in many of her gardens.

Otherwise visit the Eastern Australian states, checking when the organised tours of her gardens can be booked :)

Hels said...

Andrew
Edna wanted to be natural, like Italian gardens, not rigidly pre-planned like English gardens. Whether she actually threw heaps of potatoes onto some land or not, we certainly know what her general goal was.

CherryPie said...

I love gardens and appreciate gardens that have been created by famous garden designers.

I had never heard of Edna, thankyou for introducing me to her.

Ирина Полещенко said...

Garden design is a wonderful kind of art and science. I like gardens very much. I highly appreciate the work of people who decorate gardens, grow flowers and trees...

Hels said...

CherryPie
I think had Edna Walling stayed in the UK and established her garden designing career there, British garden lovers would have been much more familiar with her designs. HoweverVictorian/NSW/Qld and New Zealand garden lovers were besotted.

Her basic design principles: (https://www.tantamount.com.au/walling/designer/default.htm)
1.Work with existing landscapes eg slopes, rocks and trees
2.Begin by sculpting the surface of the land, preferably not levelling it
3.Create a unity between the house and the garden
4.Use architectural principles to design the garden; soften w dense planting
5.Individually design for each site and the needs of the clients, and
6.Keep garden maintenance to a minimum

Hels said...

Irina
I hadn't thought of Edna's career as a combination of art and science, but you are quite right. From a young age, she was fascinated with botany, climatology, and native vs imported land uses. But mostly because horticulture is the art and science of growing ornamental plants, fruits, vegetables and trees, especially in this case for landscaping.

Luiz Gomes said...

Desde já, também desejo uma excelente tarde de segunda-feira ou manhã de segunda. Temos jardins maravilhosos, como os do Roberto Burle Marx, já postei várias vezes e no Blogger e março teremos um.

Britta said...

Dear Helen, I can't believe it: this interesting and famous garden architect slipped under my radar level - I have so many garden literature, but she never appeared in that. Thank you for your post: I will be on the look-out for her books (Amazon will help, if nothing else can).

Hels said...

Luiz
Perfect :) The great style of Paul Bangay's gardens in Melbourne is credited to Edna Walling, Roberto Burle Marx and David Hicks. The gardening design world is closely connected, is it not?

Hels said...

Britta
It doesn't matter how well read we are in our favourite subjects, there is no way to have covered the whole world's literature. But that is one of the great joys of blogging. You'll enjoy one or more of the following books:

Gardens in Australia. Their Design and Care, by Walling E
Walling E.The Gardens of Edna Walling, by Watts P
Edna Walling book Australian Garden Design, by Walling
Gardens in Australia: Their Designs & Care, by Walling

And look for others on https://www.ebay.com.au/b/Edna-Walling-Non-Fiction-Hardcover-Books/261186/bn_78867894?srsltid=AfmBOop1arqWt5DWieQhy-eb38FxkfskV476q3YD6Hx_o3erKqz9SonX

Handmade in Israel said...

I am not familiar with Walling's work, but those curved walls do look attractive.

Hels said...

Handmade
I wasn't familiar with her design ideas either until I started reading about British garden architects. Only then did I wonder how the transition from European to Australian plans occurred.