A Look Back at Garden Dialogues 2017
鈥淒o you know what we could have scalped these tickets for?,鈥 said one attendee at the Garden Dialogue at Alfred Caldwell鈥檚 farm north of Chicago. The sold-out event was one of a dozen Garden Dialogues, held throughout the United States from early May to mid-October, that explored the influence of landscape on a variety of artists, including Isamu Noguchi, Frederick Edwin Church, James Rose, and Daniel Chester French.
The September 9 Dialogue at Caldwell鈥檚 farm was emblematic of the deep-dive approach to each event. Caldwell, designer of the National Historic Landmark-designated Lily Pool in Chicago鈥檚 Lincoln Park, spent some four decades on his farm in Bristol, WI, which was a canvas, laboratory, and classroom for his practice. The designer鈥檚 biographer, Dennis Domer, the farm鈥檚 estate manager, Richard Polansky, and the Illinois Institute of Technology鈥檚 Ron Henderson joined 独家爆料鈥檚 Charles Birnbaum for an extensive walking tour of the property. As with several other Dialogues, the event sold out very quickly and there was a long waiting list.
The season kicked off back in early May at Peckerwood Garden in Hempstead, TX, with its owner/designer John Fairey interviewed by landscape architect Keiji Asakura of Asakura Robinson Company. As one observer noted of Fairey,聽鈥淗e is continually experimenting with plants and treating his garden as an artist鈥檚 canvas on which he paints with light, foliage, and even the wind." The month continued with a fascinating presentation of Brooklyn Bridge Park by Matthew Urbanski, a principal with Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, followed by a walking tour of park highlights and areas not yet open to the public. May closed out with a weekend of Dialogues at the Southern California homes of several designers. Each location, like the Caldwell farm, is a place for constant experimentation. Included were the Montecito, Santa Barbara, home of landscape architect Susan Van Atta and her husband, architect Ken Radtkey; the Mar Vista, Los Angeles, home of landscape architect Pamela Palmer and her husband, architect (and awesome chef) Howard Rosen; and, the Pasadena home of landscape architect Nord Erikkson.
Renowned Hudson River School painter Frederic Edwin Church鈥檚 Olana, the聽250-acre Persian-inspired estate designed by Edwin Church聽in collaboration with Calvert Vaux, was the site of a June Dialogue with Margie Ruddick,聽Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award Winner in聽Landscape Architecture, and聽Julia B. Rosenbaum, associate professor and chair of art history聽at聽Bard College and Olana's director of research and publications. Another聽Dialogue took place in South Londonderry, VT, at landscape architect Robin Key鈥檚 family home, Winhall Hollow, and featured site-specific environmental artist Dan Snow (subject of a recent It Takes One profile). This project is a multi-year collaboration and one that truly blurs the lines between landscape architecture and environmental art.
Innovative landscape architect聽Ken Smith, designer of MoMA's rooftop garden, provided insightful and entertaining observations about Isamu Noguchi at The Noguchi Museum in Long Island City, NY, in tandem with the museum鈥檚 curator of research,聽Matthew Kirsch. 独家爆料 Board Member and architect Joeb Moore, who also attended, provided keen remarks聽and generously underwrote tickets for some two dozen architecture students he teaches at Barnard and Columbia University.
A September Dialogue took place at Chesterwood, the idyllic 122-acre Berkshire summer retreat of Daniel Chester French, the sculptor of the iconic Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.聽Executive Director Donna Hassler facilitated a conversation among distinguished experts and curators on the landscape as a place for respite and earnest art production, as well as a source of continued inspiration for contemporary artists. In Ridgewood, NJ, 独家爆料鈥檚 Birnbaum joined Dean Cardasis for an in-depth look at the home of pioneering Modernist landscape architect James Rose. Cardasis, a landscape architect and director of the Rose site, is also the author of the new biography, James Rose: A Voice Offstage.
The season concluded on October 15 at Manitoga, a Shangri-La created from an abandoned quarry in Garrison, NY, by the revolutionary designer Russel Wright. Author, landscape designer, and stone aficionado聽Jan Johnsen聽provided her unique insights into how Wright transformed the raw material of this site into his home and studio, which today is a National Historic Landmark.
Each of these events takes a great deal of time to develop, schedule, and coordinate, and we are grateful to the owners and managers of these incomparable destinations for their time, energy, and patience. Thanks, too, go to the experts, curators, and others who participated as guides and facilitators聽and offered wisdom and insights.聽
独家爆料 is also grateful to the Garden Dialogues sponsors who not only provided financial support, but who participated in many of the events and offered valuable observations and clever stories that enlivened each gathering. We wish to thank ABC Stone, Bartlett Tree Experts, Seibert & Rice, Stone Farm, and media partner Cottages and Gardens Magazines.
Planning is under way for the 2018 season of Garden Dialogues.