Situated within the garden are several pieces of sculpture, many linked to the gallery at Inverleith House and its past use as the Scottish Gallery of Modern Art.
![P1070827 scaled](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/P1070827-150x150.jpg)
Harry’s Gates
Every day, hundreds of visitors pour into the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, many of them through our East Gate. To do this, one must pass through two sets...![rb](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/rb-150x150.jpg)
International Day of Forests 2021 – Resilience Bench
On this year’s International Day of Forests, we are taking a look at our newest permanent work by Angus Ross, Resilience Bench, which took up residence in Inverleith House when we reopened between national lockdowns in October 2020.![WhatsApp Image 2020 04 15 at 4.34.38 PM](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/WhatsApp-Image-2020-04-15-at-4.34.38-PM-150x150.jpeg)
Early Warning Signs
In a time of such unpredictable global conditions, we can’t pull ourselves away from thinking about the timely delivery of RBGE’s newly adopted artwork Early Warning Signs. Taking up a prominent position at the entrance to Inverleith House at the beginning of this year, it seems only too fitting that the spinning ‘climate/change’ (‘change/climate’) sign arrived during a particularly stormy January.![BirdBathLP](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/BirdBathLP-150x150.jpg)
Mystery stone
Have you ever wondered what the stone situated to the west of the beech hedge at RBGE is? Have you even noticed it’s there? The lump of red...![P1010017](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/P1010017-150x150.jpg)
Haus Wittgenstein/Inverleith House
Haus Wittgenstein/Inverleith House Artist: Alan Johnston Date: 1995 Materials: Beeswax, charcoal and varnish on stone Ownership: On permanent loan from the artist Made to accompany the award-winning exhibition...![Bute bench 3](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Bute-bench-3-150x150.jpg)
Bute Memorial Bench
Commissioned by Lady Bute as a memorial to her husband John, Sixth Marquess of Bute.![Porthcurno](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Porthcurno-150x150.jpg)
Rock Form (Porthcurno)
Rock Form (Porthcurno) reflects Hepworth's on-going interest in the relationship between landscape and human interest.![20170703 DSCF6690](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/20170703-DSCF6690-150x150.jpg)
Ascending Form (Gloria)
This is one of Hepworth's earliest large-scale bronzes, featuring two diamond shapes, the larger sitting on top of the smaller, suggesting growth and upward movement.![linnaeus 1](https://stories.rbge.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/linnaeus-1-150x150.jpg)
Linnaeus Monument
The Linnaeus Monument was erected by John Hope a year after Linneaus' death. The monument, built at Hope's own expense, is a lasting testament to his regard for Linnaeus.- Grow and Magnify: An Illustrator's Journey with Mycologists and Fungi
- Florilegium: A gathering of flowers
- Closing the Loop
- Mysteries inside the RBGE Illustrations Collection
- Early Warning Signs
- Part 2/2: 'Sensing and Presencing the Imperceptible', Siân Bowen's Micro-conference
- Part 1/2: 'Sensing and Presencing the Imperceptible', Siân Bowen's Micro-conference
- Siân Bowen's Leverhulme Research Fellowship Exhibition: After Hortus Malabaricus: Sensing and Presencing Rare Plants
- Microsculpture at Inverleith House
- Spinning a Yarn
- A sculptural take on our Herbarium collection
- Plant Scenery of the World
- Curious objects - contemporary art and palms
- Haus Wittgenstein/Inverleith House
- Sculptures in Inverleith Garden
- Bute Memorial Bench
- Rock Form (Porthcurno)
- Ascending Form (Gloria)
- Linnaeus Monument