During the pandemic, restricted access to green space, coupled with sky-rocketing anxiety, awakened an instinctive need to connect with nature in the safety of the home environment. Beyond the obvious, Sparke muses that the reasons we like to bring plants indoors ‘are probably too deeply embedded in the human psyche for us to be able to easily explain them’. Undoubtedly nature has ‘life-affirming qualities’ that compensate for many of the challenges and tensions of contemporary urban existence – Sparke lists ‘an over-dependence on technology, social isolation, and environmental problems’ for starters. Research in the field of neuroaesthetics, such as that undertaken by Professor Susan Magsamen at Johns Hopkins University, is seeking to understand the reasons behind our desire to connect with nature, but as Sparke shows, it is a need that designers have been satisfying in different styles and forms for a long time.
Miranda Vane