Berkshire
Gardens Trust
Reg.Charity No.1201501

February 2026 Lecture
-by ZOOM
Derek Jarman's Garden at Prospect Cottage
A talk by Jill Francis
Tuesday 10th February 2026 at 7.00 pm
We are very pleased to welcome Jill Francis, who is an early modern historian, specialising in gardens and gardening in the late-sixteenth and early-seventeenth
centuries, although she makes occasional forays into later gardens when they spark her interest – as here!
Jill has taught history at the Universities of Birmingham and Worcester and has devised and taught courses in garden history at Winterbourne House, also part of the University of Birmingham. She is an occasional lecturer in a variety of garden history groups and associations including of course, the Gardens Trust. Her book, Gardens and Gardening in Early Modern England and Wales, was published by Yale University Press in 2018.
The garden at Prospect Cottage on Dungeness Point was created in the late 1980s by the maverick, controversial, supremely talented theatre-director and gay rights activist, Derek Jarman. The garden, built on a flat, bleak, desolate expanse of shingle in the shadow of the Dungeness nuclear power station almost defies our definition of a garden: it has no borders and no boundaries. Yet Jarman created a wonderfully artistic landscape from stones, shells and driftwood scavenged from the beach, along with old tools, discarded rusty objects and an improbable array of indigenous and introduced plants. The result was a garden of ethereal beauty, and it still remains, 30 years after Jarman’s death, for us to explore, and to marvel at.
Booking
Please book online by 9th February 2026. The tickets are £7 each for both members and non-members. We will send you a Zoom link for the lecture a few days beforehand. The lecture will last approximately 1 hour, followed by questions. The lecture will be recorded with the link available for a week to those people who have booked for the event.

