In Harmony With Nature: Lessons from the Arts and Crafts Garden
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Average customer review:Product Description
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #264334 in Books
- Published on: 2001-03-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 160 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
Anyone who is interested in the art of gardening and the form, texture, and shape of plants (and what gardener isn't?) will enjoy this book just for the sheer beauty of its photography. The dramatic design, with flowing masses of herbaceous plantings playing off Arts & Crafts structures (birdbaths, sundials, and arbors), is captured in numerous full-page color photographs. The Arts & Crafts ideal of the unity of house and garden shows in the interplay of plants and garden structures: roses climbing old stone walls, rows of fluffy lavender shaded by the heavy crosspieces of pergolas, branching tree limbs captured in stained glass.
The skill of the craftsperson and the gardener in unifying house and garden shines through in the details of the stone and woodwork and the lushness of the planting. These design ideas, developed in the mid-18th century in reaction to a perceived threat of mechanization, are as aesthetically pleasing today as they were 150 years ago. And the juxtaposition of the sturdy, hand-hewn quality of the craftsmanship with the free-flowing plantings is no doubt needed even more today in our world of faxes, computers, and cell phones.
Reading Rick Darke's love poem of a book to Arts & Crafts gardens is like going on a tour of North America and Britain's best gardens, accompanied by a most knowledgeable and enthusiastic tour guide. You are invited into the back gardens of all those really cool bungalows; your stroll through the gardens is enhanced by informed discourse on their history and the techniques used to create them. Many of the design ideas translate well to today's smaller gardens: dividing space into garden "rooms," and using urns or fountains as focal points and screens to create a sense of enclosure within the garden. Darke, an ornamental grass expert from Pennsylvania, has written the definitive--and the most beautiful--book on Arts & Crafts gardens. --Valerie Easton
From Booklist
The principles of the arts and crafts movement remain as vital for gardeners today as when they were first articulated in the 1800s. Darke highlights a number of important homes and garden settings associated with arts and crafts style to underscore how design elements make reference to nature, thereby creating harmonious kinships between the indoor environment of a home and its outdoor spaces. Quoting seminal figures such as Morris, Ruskin, Emerson, and garden writers Gertrude Jekyll and William Robinson, Darke reexamines the pertinence of arts and crafts ideals for our own gardens. In sidebar boxes he suggests specific plants and planting methods, and types of materials and decorative embellishments, consistently providing the ways and means to tap into the philosophy of an arts and crafts mindset. A bevy of beautiful photographs illustrates Darke's thoughtful and inspiring ruminations. Alice Joyce
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From the Author
My work has afforded me the opportunity to visit and photograph a great many Arts & Crafts gardens in Great Britain and across North America. I've been lucky to wake up in many of these gardens, to share meals and conversation in them. My journeys have left an indelible mark on my own understanding of the garden and how richly it can contribute to the character of daily life. This book is a distillation of these lessons learned from the Arts & Crafts garden.
Customer Reviews
A fresh view on a classic garden style
Rick Darke has produced a beautiful book. "Arts and Crafts" gardens appeared along with craftsman-type architecture and furniture in the latter 1800s. Some of the great UK and US gardens are examples and Jekyl, Luytens and Wright are a few recognizable practitioners of the style. The concept is to link the garden to the associated buildings in a manner consistent with the locale. Yes, that is a mouthful, but it is one worth chewing-on a bit if you've tired of the typical garden and the now-trite garden book.
Although perhaps easiest to envision at a large estate, the principles presented are easily adapted to smaller gardens and I have found it helpful to have a philosophy to undergird my planning and planting.
Darke writes clearly and well, presenting his thesis in an enjoyable way. His numerous photographs are gorgeous, well-reproduced and inspiring in a horticultural sense. This is a very worthwhile book at a very fair price.
