Randoll Coate

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Gilbert Randoll Coate (8 October 19092 December 2005) was a British diplomat, maze designer and "labyrinthologist".

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[edit] Early life

The son of Gilbert Randoll Coate, an expatriate businessman, Coate was born in Lausanne, Switzerland. After studying at the Collège de Lausanne he won a scholarship to Oriel College, Oxford, reading French and German. During the Second World War he served with military intelligence, using his language abilities to interrogate prisoners of war in the "London Cage". He also took part in Operation Archery, a commando raid on port Vaagso, Norway and helped support Greek resistance fighters in liberating Kalamata.

[edit] Diplomatic career

After the war, Coate joined the UK Foreign Office with diplomatic postings to Salonika, Oslo, Leopoldville, Rome, The Hague, Buenos Aires, Stockholm and finally Brussels at which point he took early retirement in 1967.

[edit] Maze designer

Having had a long-standing interest in art and history, Coate took to designing mazes and completed over 50 new mazes in Britain and around the world. Coate's maze designs are particularly noted for their symbolism. Although it is rarely possible to see a large maze in plan view, Coate's designs would often incorporate hidden shapes and references of significance to the clients who had commissioned the maze.

Coate's first maze commission, The Imprint of Man, was completed in 1975 for a private garden in Gloucestershire. The overall outline was of a giant footprint 57 m long by 29 m wide – a size calculated to match the size of a 300-m tall person, matching the height of the Eiffel Tower. The hedge maze, constructed from 3,000 yew bushes, ended up too large for its intended field. Coate's solution was to extend the maze into the adjacent river, creating an artificial island for the second toe. The intricate design incorporated 132 symbols, including numbers, signs of the zodiac and local wild animals.

Some of his other notable mazes include;

  • Pyramid (1977) — yew hedge maze in the form of a pyramid at the Château de Beloeil, Belgium, in which the height of the hedges increases to reach 6 m at the centre
  • Creation (1979) — yew hedge maze at Värmlands Säby, Sweden, for the Baroness of Falkenberg, with overlapping layers of symbolism. Seen one way, the egg-shaped outline represents the Garden of Eden incorporating figures for Adam, Eve, the Serpent and the apple. Seen another way, the hedge outlines form the shape of the horned Minotaur of the original Minoan labyrinth.

[edit] Minotaur Designs

In 1979, Coate was introduced to Adrian Fisher, another enthusiastic maze designer. Shortly afterwards Coate and Fisher formed the maze design company Minotaur Designs and designed 15 mazes together between 1979 and 1989, (some with the landscape architect Graham Burgess in 1983 and 1984). These included:

[edit] Other mazes

  • Sun Maze and Lunar Labyrinth (1996) — Longleat, near Bath, England, for the Marquess of Bath (who has another four mazes in the grounds of the house)
  • Millennium MazeBorghese gardens, Rome, Italy
  • Lappa Valley Railway Maze — yew hedge Cornwall, England, shaped like an early steam locomotive
  • El laberinto de Borges (Borges Memorial Maze) — San Rafael, Mendoza, Argentina, box hedge maze, measuring 95 m by 65 m, in memory of the writer Jorge Luis Borges (a personal friend of Coate's), inspired by his short story El Jardin de Senderos que se Bifurcan (The Garden of Forking Paths). Shaped like an open book, the design incorporates, in Braille, a famous quotation from the blind writer, that a book and a labyrinth are "one and the same".

[edit] Family life

In 1955, Coate married the painter, Pamela Dugdale Moore, with whom he raised two daughters. He was also made a Chevalier of the Ordre de Léopold in 1965 and appointed a Member of the Royal Victorian Order (MVO) in 1966.

He died in Le Rouret, near Grasse, France on the 2 December 2005, aged 96.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Coate, R; Mont Athos, la Sainte Montagne (Arthaud, 1949)
  • Fisher, Coate and Burgess; A Celebration of Mazes (1984) ISBN 0-948265-85-X.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

  • Mazemaker.com — The website of Adrian Fisher's current maze design company incorporates a portfolio of past projects, including photographs and descriptions of mazes created in partnership with Coate