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The Flowering of the Landscape Garden Mark Laird

The Flowering of the Landscape Garden By Mark Laird

The Flowering of the Landscape Garden by Mark Laird


$43.99
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

Mark Laird offers a wealth of visual and literary materials to revolutionize our understanding of the English landscape garden as a powerful cultural expression.

The Flowering of the Landscape Garden Summary

The Flowering of the Landscape Garden: English Pleasure Grounds, 172-18 by Mark Laird

The park of lawns, trees, and serpentine lakes in a picturesque composition of greens has long been viewed as the enduring achievement of eighteenth-century English landscape art. Yet this conventional view of the picturesque style ignores the colorful flowers and flowering shrubs that graced the landscape garden of the Georgian era.
While the book is primarily devoted to the historical reconstruction of the formal and horticultural characteristics of "theatrical" shrubberies and flowerbeds, it also aims to animate the world of the eighteenth-century pleasure ground. Mark Laird shows how the unwritten lore of planting design was passed down by generation after generation of gardeners and discusses the interaction of landscape designer, client, nurseryman, land agent, and gardener in modifying and transforming the geometric layouts of previous generations. He traces the development of planting design theory and practice from Batty Langley to Capability Brown and William Chambers, and demonstrates how an English mania for flowering shrubs and conifers from eastern North America helped create the distinctive planting forms of the Georgian pleasure ground.
Laird offers readers a wealth of visual and literary materialsfrom contemporary paintings, engravings, poetry, essays, and letters to more prosaic household accounts and nursery billsto revolutionize our understanding of the English landscape garden as a powerful cultural expression. Through his original watercolor reconstructions of planting forms and through delightful descriptions of seasonal change and sensuous effect, he makes the gardens come alive, thus recognizing both the palpable qualities and aesthetic sophistication of eighteenth-century planting design.
Laird's training as a landscape architect, garden conservator, and historian gives the book remarkable breadth and depth. It is a benchmark work, uniquely bridging the gap in landscape history between design and planting and horticultural studies.

The Flowering of the Landscape Garden Reviews

"Magisterial." * The Guardian *
"A must-have masterwork." * Philadelphia Inquirer *
"Every once in a while an academic book on the subject of landscape history turns out to be in a class of its own, a 'classic' as it were. The Flowering of the Landscape Garden . . . reads as smoothly as a good novel, explains as rationally as a textbook, and delights as easily as a walk though Painshill Park." * Landscape Architecture *
"Laird's work over the past fifteen years has done much to dispel our misconceptions about the role and significance of flowers and shrubs in the English landscape garden. He has forged a new narrative which shifts the focus away from parkland to the more intimate surroundings of the house." * Times Literary Supplement *
"Laird's work is not just a library product but a hands-on appreciation and ongoing dedication to his subject." * English History Review *
"An invaluable contribution to landscape and horticultural history." * Journal of Architectural Conservation *
"A revisionist history of the eighteenth-century English landscape garden, using contemporary plant lists, plans, paintings, poetry, essays, letters, household accounts, and nursery bills. . . . These landscapes were not the monochromatic fields of green grass and trees we have come to accept as typical. They were filled with color in plantings beneath trees, along paths, and in flower gardens set in beds near the house. The book is well designed and lavishly illustrated. Laird's original watercolor reconstructions of planting forms show the color provided by shrubs and flower beds that have not survived." * Library Journal *

About Mark Laird

Mark Laird is a historic landscape consultant who works on preservation projects in North America and Europe. He teaches landscape history at the University of Toronto and serves as review editor of Studies in the History of Gardens and Designed Landscapes.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction: Locating the Georgian Shrubbery and Flower Garden
Ch. 1. The Origins of Theatrical Planting
Ch. 2. The North American Influx: A Mania for Pines and Magnolias
Ch. 3. The First Shrubberies: Circuits, Clumps, and Axiality
Ch. 4. The Role of Exotics in Early Shrubberies Great and Small
Ch. 5. Flowers in Cones, Crescents, Circles, and Conservatories
Ch. 6. Flower Gardens Before Nuneham: The Planting Palette
Ch. 7. The Shrubbery Codified
Ch. 8. Shrubberies Perfected: Professionals in the Pleasure Ground
Ch. 9. Theatrical Flower Beds and Flowering Elysiums
Ch. 10. A Flower Garden of Profusion and Luxuriancy
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index of Names and Places
Index of Plant Names
Permissions and Credits

Additional information

GOR007411964
9780812234572
081223457X
The Flowering of the Landscape Garden: English Pleasure Grounds, 172-18 by Mark Laird
Used - Very Good
Hardback
University of Pennsylvania Press
1999-03-23
464
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - The Flowering of the Landscape Garden