Little Sparta

Ian Hamilton Finlay’s poetic garden in the Pentland Hills, an hour from central Edinburgh, is a celebration of the idea that art doesn’t only belong in galleries, and poems don’t always live in books. Little Sparta is one of the treasures of the 20th century and often described as Scotland’s greatest work of art. 

Set in the Pentland Hills, near Edinburgh, Little Sparta is Ian Hamilton Finlay’s greatest work of art. Finlay moved to the farm of Stonypath in 1966 and, in partnership with his wife Sue Finlay, began to create what would become an internationally acclaimed garden across seven acres of a wild and exposed moorland site.

Collaborating with stone carvers, letterers and at times other artists and poets, the numerous sculptures and artworks created by Finlay, which are all integral to the garden, explore themes as diverse as the sea and its fishing fleets, our relationship to nature, classical antiquity, the French Revolution and the Second World War. Individual poetic and sculptural elements, in wood, stone and metal, are sited in relation to carefully structured landscaping and planting. In this way, the garden in its entirety is the artwork.

Contact

Little Sparta Stonypath Dunsyre ML11 8NG Google Maps

Website

01899 810711

Email

Opening times

Thurs—Sun, 11am—5pm

Visitor information

  • Toilets

Nearest bus stop

Header image credit: Header image credit: Photograph by Robin Gillanders, Courtesy of Little Sparta Trust

Little Sparta

Little Sparta Stonypath Dunsyre ML11 8NG