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‘A lot goes on in a dying leaf’

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A black and white, head and shoulder shot of a man with dark hair. which light boxes on either side of him. He is smiling, and leaning his head in his hands

Dead leaves are underfoot, on urban pavements, in rural fields and wherever we do not want them in gardens. In London we kick away leaves fallen from plane trees, and everywhere we rake leaves briskly off our lawns. We do not go slowly and look at them closely.

Slow walking and close looking helped the greatest botanical artist in my lifetime to turn flowers and dead leaves into masterpieces. Rory McEwen died in 1982, aged 50, but his reputation and influence as a botanical artist have grown with each retrospective exhibition. An excellent show of his work is currently touring the US, from Charleston to Florida and then Chicago from May 17 to August 17 next year.

Until December 15 it is in the Davis Museum at Wellesley College, Massachusetts, where it is admirably presented against high white walls. For its opening, undergraduates of this women-only college wore flower-themed dresses and decorations, a new twist to McEwen’s impact. Next year a smaller exhibition will begin at London’s Garden Museum. Meanwhile a fine exhibition catalogue is on sale, Rory McEwen: A New Perspective on Nature, beautifully illustrated with support from the Mellon family’s Oak Spring Garden Foundation. It is graced with a foreword by Ruth Stiff, curator of international exhibitions at Kew, and an exceptional essay by Martyn Rix, botanist and expert in botanical art, who was a friend and guide to McEwen for many years.

A black and white, head and shoulder shot of a man with dark hair. which light boxes on either side of him. He is smiling, and leaning his head in his hands
Rory McEwen: he would work with extreme discipline in his studio for hours on end © Courtesy of the tstate of Rory McEwen

McEwen was born into the British upper class, spending a wartime childhood in the grounds of Marchmont House, a mansion on the Scottish borders. He was the fourth of seven children, a spur to his own achievements. He became a fine musician, singing and playing the guitar, a talent that predominated in his undergraduate years at Cambridge. He profoundly admired Lead Belly, the legendary 12-string guitarist and singer from the American South, then little known in Britain. His musical interrelationships are a subject in themselves, from his meeting with Lead Belly’s widow in New York, to his appearances on an admired BBC TV show in the early 1960s, and the company he kept at his house in Chelsea. There, the Beatle George Harrison first met and learned from Ravi Shankar, the Indian sitar-player, a visitor housed by McEwen and his family.

Guitar playing requires precision and persistence. They are qualities that botanical art needs too. McEwen recalled that he began to paint flowers at the age of eight thanks to his French governess: the exhibition includes a leaf he painted then, already notably. At Eton College, he was lucky to be guided by the art master Wilfrid Blunt, a skilled botanical artist and historian of the subject. Crucially he made McEwen aware of the long history of the genre, from early herbals and religious books to the great master Pierre-Joseph Redouté and others. McEwen looked at hundreds of prints and originals of their work and studied their techniques. His close analysis of these forerunners distinguishes his art from simple illustration. So do the depth of his eye and the material on which he painted.

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“I have never really been interested in botanical illustration per se,” he wrote in older age to Blunt, “but rather in that moment when painting starts to breathe poetry.” Viewers of his work need to look at it with this moment in mind. Botanical art aims at exact representation and is distinct from flower painting, whether Monet’s water lilies or Cedric Morris’s irises. McEwen saw exactness as a gate to meaning.

Most of his painting is in watercolour on vellum, the least forgiving of white surfaces, one rarely used in the 1960s. With its help he contrived a luminous effect, especially in the leaves of plants he painted. For hours on end, he worked with extreme discipline in an attic or studio, listening to music through headphones, his guitar propped against the wall, taking second place from 1965 onwards. He would emerge with his charm and energy unimpaired and engage smoothly with his family and many guests.

A purple and white fritillary flower hangs from its delicate green stalk. The painting is very detailed, showing every bump and crease on the plant
‘Fritillaria meleagris’ 1981 © Estate of Rory McEwen

In due course he travelled east, not only to Japan which fascinated him and where exhibitions of his work were greatly admired. He loved spending time in Afghanistan, India and Bhutan, where he soon needed a butterfly net: the queen of Bhutan ordered one to be made for him from a piece of her mosquito netting. In the 1970s he kept small images of Buddha on his desk, befitting his contemplative eye while painting so meticulously. He looked and thought deeply.

In 1958, he married Romana von Hofmannsthal, an Astor on her mother’s side. The spectre of an office job receded and he could play, sing and paint as he wished. Like the folk songs he performed, some of the flowers that he presented had roots in popular culture. To find living old-fashioned tulips he joined the Wakefield and North of England Tulip Society. In 1962, with his wife Romana’s help, he had his first exhibition in New York which was admiringly reviewed for its “grace and exactitude” in The New York Times.

It drew two remarkable visitors, Bunny Mellon, hyper-rich collector of botanical books and art, and through her, Jackie Kennedy, with whom McEwen, aged 30, discussed his tulips. Mellon then bought his masterly painting of four carnations, rendered from plants from Allwoods nursery in Sussex, and one of tulips from the Wakefield Society. She sent them to the Kennedys at the White House where they hung in private rooms. Ever a thoughtful correspondent, McEwen wrote to the Wakefield Society, telling them of his delight that “so long as the White House stands the Wakefield Society’s tulips will be hanging on the wall”. Actually they were loans from Mellon, not gifts, so they are in the exhibition with other treasures from her Garden Foundation.

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A very detailed and realistic dying leaf, fallen from a tree. The leaf is brown and curling in at the edges.
‘True Facts From Nature 3 (Sycamore Leaf)’ 1973 © Estate of Rory McEwen

In Massachusetts, I admired a follower’s picture of Tulipa “Rory McEwen”, violet on white and difficult to grow well. I then returned to the entrance. The security guard remarked that I was not the first visitor from England: a lady had just come specially from Wakefield in the north. How apt, as the two of us relate to two of the artist’s supreme subjects. In 1977, McEwen went with Rix to see a wild meadow of purple and white fritillaries in Hampshire and soon after, we met socially. He noted in his diary that I had once told him that it “is the one flower it is impossible to paint”. Before long, with habitual kindness, he sent me his reply, a perfectly painted Fritillaria meleagris. Others, taller and bigger, are in the current show.

“A lot goes on in a dying leaf”, he wrote to his niece, “you’d be surprised”. A superb series of paintings, “True Facts From Nature”, included one such leaf in 1973. From late 1977 he excelled with them, placing them carefully off centre on white vellum, his considered response to the surrounding minimalism of modern art. He saw them not as dying, but as “showing the marks of life and experience,” like “tiny condensations of the places from which they came”. He noted exactly where he found these late models, leaves with addresses in New York, Chelsea or the playing fields of Eton. Diagnosed with cancer, then a brain tumour, he wrote that he was making a connection between the “experienced” object and human thoughts and feelings and in that sense his work was indeed “abstract”. I have just examined a sycamore leaf on my path. Through his final masterpieces I see so much more of what is going on there.

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FT Crossword: Number 17,890

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FT Crossword: Number 17,890

FT Crossword: Number 17,890

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FT Crossword: Polymath number 1,308

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FT Crossword: Polymath number 1,308

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FT.com will bring you the crossword from Monday to Saturday as well as the Weekend FT Polymath.

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Subscribers can now solve the FT’s Daily Cryptic, Polymath and FT Weekend crosswords on the iOS and Android apps

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The iconic image of the Mexico Olympics recalled

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Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

As a teenager in the 1960s and with more than a soft spot for Hendrix’s music, I raise a glass to Michael Hann’s choice of Jimi’s Woodstock performance of “Star-Spangled Banner” as the apotheosis of that anthem (“The life of a song”, Life & Arts, November 2).

But he gets the details about the Mexico City Olympics slightly wrong. Tommie Smith — surely the most elegant sprinter ever to grace the track — and John Carlos raised their gloved fists in a Black power salute, to the accompaniment of the US national anthem after the 200 metres (Smith taking gold in a new world record), not the 400 metres.

Smith, who had also broken the world 400 metre record the previous year, would undoubtedly have been part of the US 4x400m relay team but, along with Carlos, was suspended by the US management and sent home before that event took place.

Charles Mercey
Tellisford, Somerset, UK

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Small European island reveals plans for £2million airfield – with first tourist flights in 2026

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Gozo, a tiny island in the Mediterranean Sea, which is part of the Maltese archipelago, is set to benefit from a new airfield

A TINY island in Europe has revealed plans for a new airfield in a bid to encourage more long-term holidaymakers.

Gozo, part of the Maltese archipelago, is often visited as a day trip for people staying in Malta.

Gozo, a tiny island in the Mediterranean Sea, which is part of the Maltese archipelago, is set to benefit from a new airfield

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Gozo, a tiny island in the Mediterranean Sea, which is part of the Maltese archipelago, is set to benefit from a new airfieldCredit: Alamy
Most holidaymakers visit Gozo on a day trip from Malta - although officials are hoping the new airfield with entice more tourists to stay overnight

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Most holidaymakers visit Gozo on a day trip from Malta – although officials are hoping the new airfield with entice more tourists to stay overnightCredit: Getty

However, the Maltese government wants these day-trippers – who visit by ferry – to stay overnight.

Government officials hope to encourage more tourists to Gozo by opening a new rural airfield on the island.

Daily flights will operate between Malta and Gozo, with an aim to entice overnight holidaymakers onto the island.

Plans for the expanded airfield in Gozo were approved by the Planning Authority’s Board in October.

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The airfield is located on the outskirts of Xewkija, a village on the island, and is currently only used for emergency purposes.

While the space currently includes a disused heliport, the plans will see the runway extended so small fixed wing aircraft and helicopters can land on the airfield.

When the airfield opens in 2026, it is thought that there will be 15 flights per day, including scheduled and chartered flights.

Island officials hope the expansion of the airfield, and the direct flights between Malta and Gozo will attract more tourists to the tiny European island.

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Ronald Sultana, director of tourism and economic development at Malta’s ministry for Gozo and planning, said: “We are not against day tripping, but we want to translate a ratio of that day tripping into longer stays.

“It will become more sustainable and we will be avoiding mass tourism.”

Discover Europe’s Secret Isles: Top 8 Underrated Destinations

The new airfield will also serve as a base for activities like skydiving.

According to a local newspaper, the entire airfield project is expected to cost €2.5million (£2million).

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Upgrades to the heliport are set to cost €1.6million (£1.3million) with a further €861,000 (£716,000) being spent on three nine-seater aircraft.

Ticket could cost between £20 and £30 when they launch, according to local media.

Infrastructure on the island is also set to be upgraded as part of the plans.

A new sports centre and a range of boutique hotels are also slated to open on Gozo.

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Sultana added: “These are some of the different projects we’re trying to implement in order to turn Gozo into a destination that one can enjoy on a longer stay.”

It’s not the only new airport opening on a popular holiday island.

The Caribbean island of Barbuda has revealed plans for a £10.8million airport.

Greenland has revealed plans for three new airports, and Crete is opening its new Kastelli International Airport by 2026.

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What is it like to visit Gozo?

TRAVEL writer James Draven visited Gozo last year, he’s what he thought about the Maltese island.

More laid-back and rural than its sister island, locals say that Gozo is what Malta was like 50 years ago.

The ferry ride is quick and cheap, so you’d be daft not to take a day trip to see the golden sands of Ramla Bay, ancient salt pans on the shoreline, the Bronze Age hilltop citadel or Ggantija Temples, man-made structures that predate the pyramids of Egypt.

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Meanwhile, these are six secret holiday spots in Europe.

And this French holiday spot has been described as “unfairly overlooked”.

The new airfield is slated to open in 2026, with both scheduled and chartered flights set to operate between the islands

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The new airfield is slated to open in 2026, with both scheduled and chartered flights set to operate between the islands
New boutique hotels are also slated to open on the island, further encouraging holidaymakers to stay overnight

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New boutique hotels are also slated to open on the island, further encouraging holidaymakers to stay overnightCredit: Alamy

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US alleges Iranian man was hired to plot Donald Trump assassination

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Donald Trump

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US prosecutors on Friday accused Iran’s government of hiring a man to set in motion plots to assassinate perceived enemies of the regime, including president-elect Donald Trump.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in September directed Farhad Shakeri, one of its assets, to surveil Trump and come up with a plan to kill him, according to an unsealed criminal complaint on Friday. He said he was told at a meeting in early October to put forward an assassination plan within seven days — if not, the attempt would have to wait until after the election, which they presumed he would lose.

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Shakeri, who is Iranian, told the FBI in an interview he did not intend to do so, according to court filings.

Shakeri, who remains at large and is believed to be in Iran, was charged with murder-for-hire alongside two alleged co-conspirators — both from New York — in relation to a scheme targeting another US citizen of Iranian origin who is opposed to the Islamic republic. Shakeri’s two co-defendants made an initial court appearance in Manhattan on Thursday and have been detained pending trial.

“There are few actors in the world that pose as grave a threat to the national security of the United States as does Iran,” said US attorney-general Merrick Garland.

US officials earlier this year received information about an Iranian threat to Trump, prompting the Secret Service to increase security around him.

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The 2024 presidential campaign, which culminated in Trump’s election victory on Tuesday, has been marred with threats and incidents of violence, as well as efforts by foreign governments, including Iran and Russia, to interfere with the vote.

Trump faced two unsuccessful attempts on his life during the campaign, and bomb threats appearing to come from Russian email domains briefly disrupted voting at some precincts in crucial swing states.

FBI director Christopher Wray said: “The charges announced today expose Iran’s continued brazen attempts to target US citizens, including president-elect Donald Trump, other government leaders and dissidents who criticise the regime in Tehran.”

Trump’s campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Iran’s mission to the UN declined to comment.

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When asked to focus on assassinating Trump, Shakeri told an IRGC official it would cost a “huge” amount of money, to which the officer replied: “we have already spent a lot of money . . . [s]o the money’s not an issue”, according to the complaint.

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‘That’s a bargain’ Tesco fans cry as they clear shelves of popular drink down to just 30p a can – but the deal ends soon

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'That's a bargain' Tesco fans cry as they clear shelves of popular drink down to just 30p a can - but the deal ends soon

EAGLE-EYED shoppers have spotted a deal in Tesco that is too good to resist.

If you’re a fizzy drink fanatic you could be in for a Christmas treat as the popular retailer has slashed the price of a fan favourite.

Tesco had released a Clubcard deal that has reduced the price of a household favourite

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Tesco had released a Clubcard deal that has reduced the price of a household favouriteCredit: Getty
You can pick up two lots of 15 Diet Cokes for £9 with a Tesco Clubcard

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You can pick up two lots of 15 Diet Cokes for £9 with a Tesco ClubcardCredit: Facebook
This brings the price down to 30p per can

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This brings the price down to 30p per canCredit: Facebook

You can pick up 15 Diet Cokes for £7.90 at Tesco but if you have a Tesco Clubcard you can grab two packs for £9.

This tots up to an impressive 30p per can.

One shopper snapped the deal and popped it on Facebook and users have been quick to tag their friends and family.

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On the Tesco website users rushed to the comment section to gush about the pricing.

One wrote: “Excellent value and price for this product.”

Another added: “Great size of pack, and these are great for a slightly healthier alternative to a sweet treat.”

A third user joked: “I have Diet Coke running through my veins.”

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The 330ml cans of Diet Coke are low calorie and no sugar, making it a healthier alternative to regular Coke.

Each can contains 1 calorie compared to a can of Coca-Cola Classic which contains 139 calories.

If you’re not a huge fan you can always swap out Coke for Pepsi, but watch out – the offer ends soon.

The deal is only valid until November 19 so make sure to stack up while you can.

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Tesco is offering all sorts of Clubcard bargains this Christmas with some choccy treats on offer.

You can snap up a 550g of Cadbury Heroes Tub for £4.50 with a Clubcard, which is 25 per cent of the usual price.

For the perfect stocking filler if you fancy splashing out on posh chocolate you can also pick up some Green & Black’s Organic Tasting Collection Chocolate Gift.

This is down to £9 using a Clubcard from £13 and is 395g of chocolatey goodness.

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If you’re keen to use your Clubcard but you think you may have lost your points, there is a way to get them back.

RECLAIM LOST CLUBCARD POINTS

Some people lose or forget to use their Tesco vouchers, but there’s a way to claw back the last couple of years of unused vouchers.

Here is exactly how to find out if you have any unused vouchers that you can claim.

The first step is to log into your Tesco Clubcard account on Tesco.com or through the Clubcard app.

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You’ll need your name, email address and Clubcard number to hand.

Once you have logged in, navigate to “My Clubcard Account” and then click on “Vouchers” to see a full list of any vouchers you still have to spend.

Now you’ve spotted them you can use them at the still by scanning your phone, or you can add them to your based at online check-out.

What can I get with Tesco Clubcard?

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TESCO’S Clubcard scheme allows shoppers to earn points as they shop.

These points can then be turned into vouchers for money off food at the supermarket, or discounts at other places like restaurants and days out.

Each time you spend £1 in-store and online, you get one point when you scan your Clubcard.

Drivers using the loyalty card get one point for every two litres spent on fuel.

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One point equals 1p, so 150 points gets you a £1.50 money-off voucher, for example.

You can double their worth when you swap them for discounts with “reward partners”.

For example, £12 worth of vouchers can be swapped for a £24 three-month subscription to Disney+.

Or you can swap 50p worth of points for £1 to spend at Hungry Horse pubs.

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Where you can spend them changes regularly, and you can check on the Tesco website what’s available now.

Tesco shoppers can also get Clubcard prices when they have the loyalty card.

The discounted items change regularly and without a Clubcard you’ll pay a higher price.

These Clubcard prices are usually labelled on shelves, along with the non-member price.

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But it’s worth noting that just because it’s discounted doesn’t necessarily make it the cheapest around, and you should compare prices to find the best deal.

You can sign up to get a Tesco Clubcard in store or online via the Tesco website.

The 330ml cans of Diet Coke are low calorie and no sugar, making it a healthier alternative to regular Coke

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The 330ml cans of Diet Coke are low calorie and no sugar, making it a healthier alternative to regular CokeCredit: Getty

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