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Gardner Museum unveils Monks Garden

Isabella Stewart Gardner never quite perfected her Monks Garden. From the time she moved into her palazzo in the Fenway in 1901 and began cultivating her museum and gardens, she tinkered with the green space inside the high brick wall on the building’s east side. She installed a hill and a brick walkway, added pergolas, and planted more and more annuals and perennials.

Now, as the final touch in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum’s ambitious expansion and renovation project, the Monks Garden is complete. And landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburgh, whose new design for the garden was unveiled Tuesday, has kept more to Gardner’s spirit than to her vision.

“Not to be mean, but she never got the garden right,” Van Valkenburgh said. “She never liked it.”

He took his inspiration from a tour of the museum given him by museum director Anne Hawley. “The museum is so casually organized — there are no period rooms, no collections of style — it’s much more poetic,” he said, standing along the looping black brick pathway that meanders through the new garden. “It’s an intuitive and personal museum. That’s the takeaway from being inside.”

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Exhibit Explores How Dior’s Designs Echo Impressionist Paintings

When it was time to create a new collection, Christian Dior had a ritual: He went to his garden and sat down among the flowers.

Fashion historian Florence Muller gathered drawings, photographs and paintings by Manet, Monet, Renoir and others for an exhibition on Dior and Impressionism, at the Dior Museum in Granville, the designer’s hometown. Granville is a dreary little seaside town in Normandy, France, which these days is festooned with photos of roses in celebration of its native son.

Muller says the garden ritual served Dior from 1947, when he famously invented what was dubbed the New Look, until he died 10 years later, at age 52. An old photograph shows Dior, pudgy and bald (one wag said he “looked as if he were made of pink marzipan”), in his garden, finding inspiration. You can see him in real concentration, sitting at a little table, with a pond behind him — he’s thinking and drawing, and creating.

“Each season he had to invent so many dresses, perhaps that’s why he’s holding his head,” says Muller. “It’s not so easy, you know, the work of a grand couturier.”

When he was 15, Christian Dior helped his mother design their pretty garden in Granville. Up a winding seaside road, the Diors’ pink house is a modest one.

“It’s not a very important house,” says Brigitte Richard, chief curator of the Dior Museum. “In fact, it’s a house of a bourgeois family settled in Granville.”

Dior’s bourgeois father was a fertilizer manufacturer. (Handy, for gardening!)

Like the designer, the artists of Impressionism were also inspired by flowers. Muller picked two photos to make the point.

“You have here the idea of painters in their garden,” she explains. “Like Monet, of course, [a famous example of a] garden created by an artist. And on the left side, Christian Dior with his gardens that were also creations designed by him.”

Dior stands in his gardens, in a suit and tie. Monet, in suspenders and soft hat, looks more relaxed. But both were flower lovers: Monet put gardens on his canvases; Dior put them on women. Dress collections named for flowers; fabrics patterned with roses, lily of the valley (his lucky flower, he said), embroidered bouquets; full, full, skirts that swirl like petals.

“Ha!” said Chanel, just a bit competitively. “Dior doesn’t dress women. He upholsters them.”

A strapless gown with a gauzy white skirt, once worn by Sarah Jessica Parker, is placed near a Degas ballet class. John Galliano designed the dress — he did the Dior line from the late 1990s to 2011. Other Dior designers include Yves St. Laurent, and these days Raf Simons.

Linking the clothes to Impressionism, a dreary landscape by the young Monet hangs near a dowdy 1956 Dior. Tulips — a watercolor by Berthe Morisot — echoes a brighter Dior, from 1956.

The New Look that put Dior on the fashion map in 1947 — tiny waists, huge skirts, rounded shoulders — made a powerful statement, after all the deprivations of World War II. With his New Look, Dior was saying a new day had dawned.

“It was very important because it was a symbol of a return to prosperity — the beauty of life, you know,” Muller says. It was the “return to luxurious things. … It was like a fairy tale again.”

“Dior and Impressionism” continues the fairy tale, with paintings and clothes, at the Dior Museum in Granville. The show ends Sunday.

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Garden Photographer Exhibits Stunning Food Still Lifes

Lynn Karlin

“Tender Eggplants” has the aubergines dangling from a pedestal in this photo by Lynn Karlin.

Karlin is a Design New England contributing photographer, who specializes in garden photography and this year won four Silver Awards of Achievement from the Garden Writers Association including for our feature “Almost Heaven” (Design New England, March/April 2012) and the story’s cover photo. This collection of studio work brings control and manipulation to her passion for the garden and its bounty.

Lynn Karlin

In “Garlic Scapes #2,” Karlin turns the twisting shoots in to mesmerizing sculpture.

Greenhouse Gallery at James Beard Foundation, 167 West 12th Street, New York City; jamesbeard.org.

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center Receives Delivery of Vecchio Trees

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Manzanillo Olive tree

Eye of the Day is the first Vecchio Tree Station.

Santa Barbara, California (PRWEB) September 17, 2013

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center, the first Vecchio Trees Station, has announced that the first delivery of olive trees and mature grape vines will be accepted at the Carpinteria, CA showroom September 19, 2013. The first Vecchio Tree Station will provide consumers direct access to field grown olive trees in various varieties and sizes up to 8’ in diameter. Landscape professionals and individual homeowners will be able to purchase directly from the grower through Eye of the Day. Also available through Eye of the Day Vecchio Tree Station are citrus, fig, pomegranate, Italian Cypress and almond trees. Once trees are ordered, they can be delivered within five working days. Eye of the Day will be working closely with Vecchio Trees staff to identify, tag and deliver trees to their customers.

Eye of the Day is located in southern Santa Barbara County, and features European garden décor. The headquarters boasts a wide selection of Italian and Greek terracotta planters and pottery, French Anduze pottery, and is also the largest stocking distributor of Gladding McBean glazed terracotta pottery..

Husband-and-wife owners, Brent and Suzi Freitas, established Eye of the Day in 1995 by first selling oak wine barrel planters. They gradually added a retail garden shop and expanded to include an assortment of items including benches, fountains, planters, statues and other landscape design accessories. Clients of the high-end design center include Tommy Bahama, Ralph Lauren, ABC Carpet Home. Eye of the Day recently operated a successful Pop-Up store at the Stanford Shopping Center in Palo Alto, California and has also been featured on the DIY Network. The center customizes many of its products with finishes, glazes, antique treatments, fountain conversions, and more.

About Eye of the Day Garden Design Center

Eye of the Day Garden Design Center is a retail showroom that features more than an acre of high quality garden landscape products, including Italian terracotta pottery and fountains, Greek terracotta pottery, French Anduze pottery, and products from America’s premier concrete garden pottery and decoration manufacturers. Eye of the Day is a leading importer and distributor of fine European garden pottery, and caters to private consumers and landscape design and architecture firms around the world. To see what Eye of the Day Garden Design Center can do for your business, visit http://www.eyeofthedaygdc.com.

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Home Business Innovation: Finch Garden Design

Name: Finch Garden Design
City: Fakenham
Website: www.finchgardendesign.co.uk

Finch Garden Design consists of me working from home in a room still referred to as the playroom. I trained 22 years ago and over the years slowly honed my skills while raising four children.

I was in partnership with a friend and I learned fast what I needed to do (and equally what not to do). So I went it alone and one year in, as the recession hit, I realised I needed a place for my work to be seen.

A fabulous upmarket local farm shop and cafe had opened in a huge historic barn and as it was called Back to the Garden, I harangued the owner (who was a vague acquaintance), convincing him what he really needed was a garden.

A year later and my garden opened. It took six weeks to convert a concrete farmyard into a beautiful space. The owner was generous and I was given free rein with the design, though I knew it had to be a practical commercial space. Now in its third season, it is enjoyed by many people and continues to give me a steady stream of work.

Working from home, I work at all hours and often use domestic chores to free my mind when I get a mental block designing. My contracts are in private homes in north Norfolk, the gardens and clients are extremely varied and though I will never be rich, my work is a pleasure and life is never dull.

Jackie Finch is the founder of Finch Garden Design

Find out how you can enter our Small Business Showcase here. All entries that meet the criteria are published online.

FRED gardening symposium set for Sept. 21 in Riverside

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FRED volunteer Mike Maloney (left) and landscape architect Scott Mehaffey (right) preview a private garden for the FRED tour in Riverside Sept. 21. (Photo provided)

RIVERSIDE – Gardening enthusiasts and and green thumb newbies will have a chance to learn from a number of landscape architects and designers at the FRED (Frederick Law Olmsted Riverside Education and Design) day-long garden symposium Sept. 21.

Riverside is known for its outdoor spaces, many of which were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, a 19th century American landscape designer.

“Riverside, I like to think of it as the first conservation community in America,” said FRED co-chair Cathy Maloney. “Because Olmsted designed it with all native plants, with 50 percent green space and so forth. Part of what we try to do with these design seminars is [promote] sustainability and conservation.”

The event will include displays from a number of exhibitors, vintage garden artwork, landscape designs and flowers to plant. New this year is a display titled “Beyond the Barrel” that will demonstrate imaginative ways to harvest rain water. Participants will also have eight class options to choose from, including:

• Walk Talk Landscape Design: A sidewalk tour by Scott Mehaffey, former landscape architect for the city of Chicago and the Morton Arboretum.

• Sneak peek of “The Living Green”: A preview of a documentary on the “dean of landscape architecture,” Jens Jensen.

• Garden Makeovers: A class with Tony LoBello of Mariani Landscape.

• The Late Summer Garden: A class by Roy Diblik of Northwind Perennial Farm.

“I think it’s an opportunity to get exposure to a lot of different ideas and inspiration in one day,” Maloney said. “You get a chance to see garden design in real life, if you will, because it’s the only symposium that uses real-life public spaces as the laboratory.”

Registration is open on FRED’s website, www.Fred2013.com. Pre-registration is $20 for four classes plus the keynote session –featuring TV and radio gardening personality Mike Nowak –a 25 percent savings from the full price.

FRED is sponsored by the nonprofit Frederick Law Olmsted Society, Home Depot of Countryside and Riverside Public Library. The event takes place at Riverside Village Hall and Riverside Public Library.

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Garden pots: Fashion designer’s 3 favorite shopping sources

Swimwear designer Rod Beattie uses colorful pots and artful plant arrangements to create garden vignettes in various parts of his Pasadena house, whether that means a splash of yellow and blue by the pool, a welcoming tableau at the end of the carport or a set of pots defining a lounge area outside a bedroom.

When posting our feature on Beattie’s house last week, we asked the designer about his favorite places to buy outdoor pots. His three go-to sources:

Pottery Manufacturing and Distributing: This company makes its own pots in Tecate, Mexico, and serves as an importer for other designs as well. We sent a message asking if the company allows the public to its Gardena showroom, but we got not response. Retail outlets are listed at www.potterymfg.com.

Rose Bowl Flea Market: For vintage finds, Beattie likes the granddaddy of the flea markets, held on the second Sunday of every month. www.rgcshows.com/RoseBowl.aspx

Pasadena City College Flea Market: Decorators often cite this smaller sale, on the first Sunday of every month, as an off-the-radar place for the occasional find. www.pasadena.edu/fleamarket

ALSO:

Rod Beattie house article

Rod Beattie house large-format photo gallery

Home Tours: California design profiles in pictures

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Benefits of rain gardens taking root across district

Janet Folajtar had a water problem to solve when she decided a rain garden in her yard would spare her and her Mt. Lebanon neighbors the ordeal of storm runoff. And Eddie Figas, Millvale’s community and economic development director, saw the opportunity to show very publicly what a rain garden can do in the corner of a municipal parking lot.

The two won in separate categories — residential and public — of the first contest of the Three Rivers Rain Garden Alliance, an advisory group that promotes the creation of gardens to reduce runoff, keep pollutants from streams and rivers and increase groundwater.

Of 94 rain gardens registered with the alliance, six entered the competition. On a recent daylong tour of all six, judges walked around and through each one, making notes and conferring on the identity of certain plants, on garden design and the pros and cons of each. The other four contest entrants are at a residence in Monroeville; the Latodami Nature Center in North Park; an Indiana Township community park on Middle Road; and the Mt. Lebanon Park.

A rain garden can be deep or shallow and shaped like a stream, a circle, oval or square. The location dictates the design, but the best ones are low maintenance, make use of native and adaptive plants, and quickly absorb as much storm runoff as possible.

Mr. Figas said the Millvale parking lot rain garden absorbs 64 percent of the rainwater from the site.

It is about 18 inches deep, 650 square feet and drains a 5,400-square-foot lot. One curb cut takes water that runs toward the corner of the lot, while another opens at the mouth of a gutter under a strip of grillwork bordering the sidewalk.

Millvale teamed up with GTECH Strategies using a grant from the Heinz Endowments on that project, which was completed in 2011, Mr. Figas said.

“We had done other projects with GTECH of a green nature,” he said. “We got the idea of really making an impact on a site that’s concrete. That was one of the parking lots that the borough owned, and it had minimal impact on parking spaces. When it was finished, it took up 3 1/2 spaces.

“A few people didn’t understand the concept, and that location was chosen in part” to be educational.

Ms. Folajtar, an engineering geologist and master gardener, saw a rain garden as a way to add a patio in back of her house without affecting her downhill neighbors. She also wanted to solve the problem of runoff onto her property.

“Part of my master gardener program was to do a project, and I selected a rain garden, as stormwater management has become very important in Pittsburgh,” she said. “I wanted to make it pleasing to the eye.”

She split her garden into two parts, one 100 square feet, the other 250. The larger one in the front of the house is fed by underground pipes, and she has an inlet to collect her neighbor’s runoff, she said.

“It was estimated that I collected 11,000 gallons since last September,” she said.

StormWorks, a project of the Nine Mile Run Watershed Association, and George Girty Landscape Design worked with her on the project.

Beth Dutton, program manager for Three Rivers Wet Weather, one of the alliance members, said the contest has been instructive for future programming.

“We want to do a design program for people who cannot afford” to hire a design firm and landscape architects, she said. “Other cities are giving incentives to homeowners.”

The judges said they were inspired on the tour.

“I was looking for rain gardens that solved a problem, showed some innovation, used appropriate plants, and looked nice,” which would indicate a plan for maintenance, said judge Lynne Weber, a master gardener and co-owner of The Urban Gardener.

Fellow judge Joel Perkovich, sustainable design and programs manager for Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens, spoke of the “global problem” of the loss of forests, wetlands, floodplains and meadows. These losses regionally are due in large part to lack of planning, sprawl and steep topography with heavy clay soils, he said.

“The rain gardens we observed as part of this contest are an encouraging sign that people are more conscious than ever about designing with nature in mind,” he said, “and we all are reaping the benefits.”

He said that with careful thought and maintenance, rain gardens can be aesthetic features year round. And they “should not require supplemental irrigation or fertilization after establishment.”

“The rain gardens we visited are an encouraging snapshot of the green infrastructure solutions to stormwater runoff that are being implemented in the Pittsburgh area,” said judge Sandy Feather, an educator in commercial horticulture for Penn State Extension. “In addition to managing stormwater on-site, these gardens provide habitat for pollinators, songbirds and amphibians, which are some of the species most adversely impacted by urban sprawl.

“The more our gardens mimic nature and provide ecosystem services, the better for all of us.”

The Rain Garden Alliance is made up of 18 partner organizations and has 94 registered gardens that have collected more than 2.6 million gallons of rainfall since July 1, 2009.

Garden designer shares tips at workshop in Burnham’s Marine Cove – Burnham-On


Published:
September
16, 2013
Garden
designer shares tips at workshop in Burnham’s Marine Cove

An
award-winning garden designer shared her advice at a free workshop
in Burnham-On-Sea on Saturday (September 14th).

Residents
were able to join Sarah Milner Simonds for an introduction to
garden design at Marine Cove on Burnham’s seafront.

Sarah
said: “The workshop was designed to help visitors learn how
to use edible ornamentals to make their garden more productive.”

“I’ve
been really impressed with the vegetables grown here in Marine
Cove over the summer and hope that schemes like this can be introduced
in other areas of the town.”

The
workshop was part of the ‘Incredible Edible Somerset Open Gardens
Weekend’, a series of free events around the county designed to
show off Somerset’s edible assets, from community orchards
to home gardens, with free workshops and projects open to the
public.

Plants still the point in Dallas Arboretum’s high-tech children’s garden

The Dallas Arboretum’s new children’s garden has touch screens to explore scientific puzzles, a giant kaleidoscope and a 5-foot digital sphere.

But children may be more surprised by the trees.

“There is research that discovered some kids didn’t think of trees as being alive,” said Andrea Rolleri, whose firm programmed exhibits for the garden. “They thought trees were just out there, like lampposts.”

For kids who are more comfortable with video games than the great outdoors, technology is being used to stimulate their interest in the natural world — which is what a botanical garden is all about.

“You have to look at technology as a tool and a hook,” Rolleri said.

For the past 10 years, the Medford, N.J.-based Van Sickle and Rolleri design firm, in tandem with others, has worked to unite technology and nature in the Rory Meyers Children’s Adventure Garden.

Those efforts come to fruition Saturday, when the ribbon is cut on the $62 million facility set on the east shore of White Rock Lake.

The cutting-edge children’s garden has 17 themed galleries with 150 interactive exhibits. In the Exploration Center, children can use computers to play CSI-inspired games to solve nature mysteries. They can also play games individually or with a group on the smart tables. Topics range from the solar system to animal habitats.

The giant globe, called an OmniGlobe, is programmed for various lessons, including how the continents divided, current forestation around the world and the path of historic tsunamis. The kaleidoscope is part of an exhibit on patterns in nature.

The 8-acre garden sits at the northern end of the 66-acre arboretum, which is a Dallas city park operated by the nonprofit Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Society.

Part of the park is on the former estate of pioneering oil man Everette DeGolyer, who in the 1930s chaired a committee to found a botanical garden in Dallas. The arboretum, which opened in 1984, drew almost a million visitors last year.

In recent years, arboretum officials broadened the venue’s scope, scheduling concerts, lectures and special events. The annual Dallas Blooms display is a big draw each spring and an exhibition of glass sculptures by artist Dale Chihuly proved wildly popular last year.

The Dallas Arboretum operates with an annual budget of $15.4 million. Revenue comes from the city, grants, admission, membership and rental fees. Maintenance and operation costs for the new children’s garden will be incorporated into the arboretum’s general budget.

“The Children’s Garden operations will be covered primarily by the operating revenues of the arboretum, and we expect with attendance and membership growing, revenues will grow along with them,” Renell Hutton, vice president of finance, said by email. “Many of the Children’s Garden galleries are underwritten annually by individuals, corporations, and/or foundations, just as the other programs are now.”

The great outdoors

Arboretum officials said a primary purpose of the children’s garden is to bolster regional education standards in subjects such as earth science and biology.

The trend to use interactive exhibits as a teaching tool in museums and gardens has been building for more than a decade, said Heather Johnson, project director of initiatives for the Association of Children’s Museums.

The Dallas garden, however, may be in a class by itself.

“They’re using technology in a way it hasn’t before, or more extensively than ever before,” Johnson said.

She agrees that technology can be used to lure children outdoors. “When you couple unstructured play opportunities with structured learning, research shows that really significant learning can occur,” Johnson said.

And, she said, the garden can help solve another problem of the social-media culture — a lack of physical exercise.

“There’s what some people are calling ‘nature deficit disorder,’ which is impacting children who are less active because they’re disconnected from nature, and that can lead to obesity,” she said.

Successfully engaging children could come at a price, however.

“One challenge is how well some of these high-tech exhibits hold up,” Johnson said.

Designers of the Perot Museum of Nature and Science expected large crowds but were surprised when more than a million people visited in the first seven months of operation. Some exhibits broke down under the strain. Officials closed the museum for a few days in August to catch up on maintenance.

Arboretum officials expect the same kind of tough love.

The exhibits were designed with children in mind. The paths are paved and the plants will change with the seasons. Ponds are lined with plants and other barriers to let children look, and there is one pond where children are encouraged to touch pond plants to show that some plants grow in water. Volunteers and docents are stationed in the exhibits to guide children and teach garden etiquette.

For the past few weeks, the children’s garden has had preview openings. The Children’s First Encounter gallery has been wildly popular, but the kids haven’t limited themselves to an exhibit’s intended use.

Joan Cooper, a volunteer in the exhibit, said little boys began adjusting the heads on pipes in the caterpillar fountain to change the spray. “The maintenance people told me to be firm with them. Let them have fun, but don’t let them play with the fountain heads,” she said. “They’re savvy little learners, aren’t they?”

Mindful of the Perot Museum’s experience, arboretum officials say they ordered duplicate and even triplicate exhibit replacement parts.

Engaging design

Whatever the wear and tear on the garden, the designers have worked hard to make sure children are actively engaged with the exhibits.

Given the complexity of the project, three firms — in charge of programming, landscaping and construction of major elements — worked together on the project.

Allen Juba of MKW + Associates, which did the landscaping, said designers looked at another institution popular with children — zoos.

“Zoos are more engaging. For a long time, public gardens were passive. A lot of places have rethought it and there’s a definite effort to become more like a zoo, with its animals, which are natural attractions,” Juba said.

Of course, animals move, and plants don’t. On the other hand, it is usually easier to touch a plant than a zoo animal.

“Touching is a better place to learn. It helps to make emotional connections,” said Tracy McClendon, vice president of programming for the Atlanta Botanical Garden.

The Atlanta facility was one of the first in the country to house a garden specifically designed for children. Designed in the late 1990s, it has fewer technological bells and whistles than subsequent counterparts. McClendon said the growth of interactive technology in botanical gardens is a logical reflection of the times.

“Over the past decade, for students, having opportunities for experience has become more important. Just to experience is a precursor to learning,” she said.

But while education is the goal, living plants are still the reason for the Dallas garden’s existence, Juba said.

“Plants are not background,” he said.

Not everything has to have a practical end.

“It’s meant to be beautiful as well,” he said. “It satisfies the hunger for education and the hunger for beauty.”

Rory Meyers

The new children’s garden is named for Rory Meyers, a Dallas civic volunteer who has served on the board of the Dallas Arboretum for more than 13 years. She was chairwoman of the education committee, where she was an early advocate of building a children’s garden. She also served on the executive committee and the Board of Distinguished Advisors. Her husband, Howard Meyers, and two sons, Craig and Kevin, gave $15 million in her honor to the children’s garden.

David Flick

DESIGNERS

Van Sickle and Rolleri

Role: Designed programming and exhibits for the children’s garden

Located: Medford, N.J.

Other projects: Atlanta History Center; Gerald R. Ford Museum in Grand Rapids, Mich.; and Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif.

MKW +

Associates

Role: Designed the landscaping

Located: Rutherford, N.J.

Other projects: Everett Children’s Adventure Garden in New York City; BASF Wildlife Habitat in Rensselaer, N.Y.; and East River Park in New York City

Dattner

Architects

Role: Designed the buildings and skywalk

Located: New York City

Other projects: Princeton University tennis Pavilion; Hudson River Park in New York City; and the Jewish Community Center of Staten Island, New York

SOURCES: Van Sickle and Rolleri, MKW + Associates, Dattner Architects