Sunday, December 27, 2020

Cutting Edge Gardens

 

Cutting edge garden design in Irvine. Photo by Myriam Mahiques. Personal archives.

Cutting Edge gardens are those influenced by art and horticulture, designed to break the conventions. Designers establish their own rules, sometimes based on the owners' personality. Conceptual gardens which are based on an idea, also fit in this category. 

Many cutting edge gardens utilize new technologies and materials, often man-made materials, such as concrete, steel, rubber, fabric, glass and acrylic to create visual interest. Walls are used as a frame for sculptures.

Though the landscape is wild, the scale of the rabbit sculpture creates a big surprise for the path. Newport Beach Civic Center Park, photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives.

A contemporary playground for kids surrounded by planters. It has the sea concept in the blue rubber, as it is inside a mall across the beach. Huntington Beach, photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives. 

A contemporary metal abstract sculpture with a very bright red color. It is open and a tree can be seen through it, like an informal window. The landscape is wild and very contrasting with the sculpture. Newport Beach Civic Center Park. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives.

A row of contemporary fountains with hard dramatic shadows. See the combination of gravel and ceramics behind. The wall is the edge of the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, CA. There is a green garden across the path. Bowers Museum, photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives.

Planting is used mostly for its sculptural qualities, but some plants may represent a specific habitat or region. Colorful and textural planting is a common feature, with containers used to reinforce stylistic concepts. Lighting is important to add drama.

This style of gardens is a mix, often deliberate, experimental. Man made materials are combined with natural surfaces. Outdoor furniture is used to express particular architectural styles and to introduce color. 

NOTE: The text is modified from pages 247/248 of the Encyclopedia of Landscape Design. Editor Chris Young. 

This is a photo from the book "Encyclopedia of Landscape Design" edited by Chris Young. I truly like the unexpected combination of cactus with aquatic plants. The cactus look like floating in the water, which is unconventional. See the combination of hard square patterns with the organic shape of the aquatic plants. 

This is a photo from the book "Encyclopedia of Landscape Design" edited by Chris Young. See the deep blue color combined with metal panels. An unconventional fountain for sure.

This is a photo from the book "Encyclopedia of Landscape Design" edited by Chris Young. Concrete blocks are combined with two color grasses.

This is a photo from the book "Encyclopedia of Landscape Design" edited by Chris Young. Claude Cormier's blue stick garden along the path. See the shadows across, adding texture and interest.

This is a photo from the book "Encyclopedia of Landscape Design" edited by Chris Young. Red sandstone rising up the pond in layers .


Sunday, December 13, 2020

Cactus and Succulents Gardens

 

Cactus garden at Huntington Gardens and Library, San Marino, CA. Photo by Myriam Mahiques. Personal archives, 2017.

What's the difference between succulents and cactus? Succulents are those plants that store water in their leaves or stems. Cactus are also succulents, and though all cactus are succulents, not all succulents are cactus. It is said that the thorns are the main difference, but this is not exactly this way as some cactus are not prickly. Cacti have areoles (spine cushions) and succulents, even if they are spiny, lack their cushions.

Regarding the soil needed for these gardens, though we use gravel and sand, remember that cacti do not grow in sand alone. Like other plants, they need the nutrients supplied by organic matter in the soil.

In my personal experience, cacti and succulents grow in any type of soil, even in clay soils, though of course the results are not the same. My cacti in clay do not produce flowers, but the rest which are in "any type of plant" soils, grows without  problem. I usually use the potting mix successfully. 

Landscape with succulents require only 20% of the water needed for the same area of lawn. Those that grow in containers require more frequent watering than the ones growing in the ground. Apart from this important condition (mostly in California), they are structurally beautiful and interesting. 

I took this picture in last August just for the pleasure of remember the dramatic Summer shadows in this succulent.

Cactus and succulents gardens are very nice in combination with rocks.  Like the example I am showing below which besides is completed with a wooden pergola.

Cactus garden and pergola at the Sherman Gardens and Library, Newport Beach. Currently the pergola has been removed.  Photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives, 2017.

Many people have collections of cacti and succulents, which can grow in tiny pots. Of course they will grow as much as the pots allow. I began a collection a couple of years ago, and after more than one year, those in plastic pots died, the same happened to the succulents that were under the shadow of other plants, due to lack of space. So I transplanted the rest to ceramic pots, which I located on a new shelf under the morning sun. Lighting is very important and in some cases, collections grow under artificial light. Full spectrum fluorescent tubes are better than incandescent lighting that give off a lot of heat and could burn the leaves. Do not use any LED, only horticultural LED that produce the type of red and green wavelengths.
For green houses, the minimum temperature is 55o. The next three pictures are from the Huntington Gardens and Library in San Marino, CA.

Cactus and succulents green house. Huntington Gardens and Library, San Marino.  Photo by Myriam Mahiques. Personal archives, 2017.

Cactus and succulents green house. Huntington Gardens and Library, San Marino.  Photo by Myriam Mahiques. Personal archives, 2017.

Cactus and succulents green house. Huntington Gardens and Library, San Marino.  Photo by Myriam Mahiques. Personal archives, 2017.

Succulent flowers clusters adding lots of textures to the leaves. Cactus garden at the Newport Beach Civic Center. Photo by Myriam Mahiques. Personal archives.

I took this picture in Spring. This cacti are in a ceramic pot right against a store front which is reflecting the street and sky. It has a beautiful dramatic effect. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, Seal Beach, 2016.

This arrangement is delineating an edge. I love the combination with stone and the deep blue glass. Sherman Gardens and Library. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives.

Cactus garden at the Huntington Gardens and Library, San Marino, CA. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives.

Cactus garden at the Huntington Gardens and Library, San Marino, CA. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives.

Cactus garden at the Huntington Gardens and Library, San Marino, CA. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives.

Cactus garden at Rancho Dominguez, Long Beach, CA. See how the path has little stones and others are randomly spread. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, 2019.

Cactus garden at Rancho Dominguez, Long Beach, CA. See how the path has little stones and others are randomly spread. Note a wheelbarrow is used as a decorative container. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, 2019.

Cactus and succulents garden in the Newport Beach City Hall. Photo by Myriam Mahiques, personal archives, 2017.

Succulents are very easy to reproduce, mostly ground covers. I like to plant tiny cuts in combination with other succulents. Once I had a King cactus (upper) cut with flowers, from a neighbor that was giving them away after trimming his huge cactus in the front yard. I put the cut standing vertical on a piece of paper on the floor, right next to the kitchen sliding door, so it would receive light but not too much. I waited around ten days and I planted it in the ground. The purpose of waiting is to have a sort of dry callous below to avoid rotting. The cactus grow pretty high and after three years, and I assume it was due to the Winter rains, it began rotting in the bottom. So I cut it again, began the process of getting a dry callous and planted it. It is still healthy but with no flowers.

My king cactus trim against the kitchen wall. Personal archives.

Another tip to reproduce the Cereus or Queen of the Night: but a leaf right in the union with the stem. Put it in a glass with water, in a vertical position where the cut is inside the water. Change the water every two days. In around 15 days you'll see the roots and it will be ready to plant.

My Queen of the Night leaf in a glass of water. I kept it in the kitchen next to the window. Personal archives.

Sunday, November 29, 2020

Notes on Poe's The Landscape Garden

Huntington Beach Central Park. Photo by Myriam Mahiques. Personal archives. 2020.

The most popular E. Allan Poe’s tales are those psychologically thrilling, related to murder, maladies, anguish. But I came across with this story and found it wonderful in the main character’s point of view about landscape. As always, he dies young, but this time, what is important is the emphasis in the pursue of happiness under certain unusual immaterial conditions (the landscape interventions), and the discussion of how man can affect the landscape design throughout scales, even with a minimalist contribution.


Romantic landscape, 1826

Poe tells us that his friend Ellison was a very handsome man, heir of a fortune, with a beautiful bride and ample possessions.
“He admitted but four unvarying laws, or rather elementary principles:”
Health: free exercise, specifically in the open air.
The love of woman.
The contempt of ambition.
“An object of unceasing pursuit; and he held that, other things being equal, the extent of happiness was proportioned to the spirituality of this object.”

Ancient Chinese landscape painting. From

“When it had become definitely known that such was the enormous wealth inherited, there were, of course, many speculations as to the mode of its disposal.”
Instead of engaging in extravagant expenses or involving in politics, or build great buildings, or bestowing his name in institutions of charity, he decided that none possibility was adequate for him.
“I was not surprised, however, to perceive that he had long made up his mind upon a topic which had occasioned so much of discussion to his friends. Nor was I greatly astonished at the nature of his decision. In the widest and noblest sense, he was a poet.”
It means, he was not a poet indeed, but he understood the poetic sentiment:
“The proper gratification of the sentiment he instinctively felt to lie in the creation of novel forms of Beauty”.
This concept of beauty was supported by physical loveliness. Nevertheless, Ellison did not become a musician, or a poet, or painter, or sculptor.
“But Mr. Ellison imagined that the richest, and altogether the most natural and most suitable province, had been blindly neglected. No definition had spoken of the Landscape-Gardener, as of the poet; yet my friend could not fail to perceive that the creation of the Landscape-Garden offered to the true muse the most magnificent of opportunities. Here was, indeed, the fairest field for the display of invention, or imagination, in the endless combining of forms of novel Beauty….In the multiform of the tree, and in the multicolor of the flower, he recognized the most direct and the most energetic efforts of Nature at physical loveliness.”

British landscape with a train. My (filtered) screen shot from the movie The Awakening


Being a landscape gardener would fulfill his destiny as Poet; Poe argues that no Paradises are to be found in reality as have glowed upon canvasses; in real landscapes, there will always be found a defect or an excess; the artist, can arrange the parts that will always be susceptible of improvement. Regarding landscape, Ellison takes it as the supreme art, and at this point Poe agrees it has to be true, because the artist (Ellison)
“not only believes, but positively knows, that such and such apparently arbitrary arrangements of matter, or form, constitute, and alone constitute, the true Beauty.”
So, this particular inclination triggered between the friends a kind of discussion about how to proceed with nature: with its exaltation or its improvement.
“It was Mr. Ellison who first suggested the idea…….that each alteration or disturbance of the primitive scenery might possibly effect a blemish in the picture, if we could suppose this picture viewed at large from some remote point in the heavens. "It is easily understood," says Mr. Ellison, "that what might improve a closely scrutinized detail, might, at the same time, injure a general and more distantly- observed effect."
It is interesting to see that a kind of “butterfly effect” is discussed here, together with the idea of change of scale and location for the observer’s point of view -one of the premises of design-, which in turn is involving collateral conclusions at the spatial scale where, supposedly, any former quasi-angels humans must exist:
“There might be a class of beings, human once, but now to humanity invisible, for whose scrutiny and for whose refined appreciation of the beautiful, more especially than for our own, had been set in order by God the great landscape-garden of the whole earth”.

Central Park in Huntington Beach, CA. Photo by Myriam Mahiques. Personalarchives. 2019.

Ellison then quoted a writer who had been supposed to have well treated this theme:
"There are, properly," he writes, "but two styles of landscape-gardening, the natural and the artificial. One seeks to recall the original beauty of the country, by adapting its means to the surrounding scenery; cultivating trees in harmony with the hills or plain of the neighboring land; detecting and bringing into practice those nice relations of size, proportion and color which, hid from the common observer, are revealed everywhere to the experienced student of nature. The result of the natural style of gardening, is seen rather in the absence of all defects and incongruities- in the prevalence of a beautiful harmony and order, than in the creation of any special wonders or miracles. The artificial style has as many varieties as there are different tastes to gratify. It has a certain general relation to the various styles of building……Whatever may be said against the abuses of the artificial landscape-gardening, a mixture of pure art in a garden scene, adds to it a great beauty. This is partly pleasing to the eye, by the show of order and design, and partly moral. A terrace, with an old moss-covered balustrade, calls up at once to the eye, the fair forms that have passed there in other days. The slightest exhibition of art is an evidence of care and human interest."
"From what I have already observed," said Mr. Ellison, "you will understand that I reject the idea, here expressed, of 'recalling the original beauty of the country.' The original beauty is never so great as that which may be introduced. Of course, much depends upon the selection of a spot with capabilities. What is said in respect to the 'detecting and bringing into practice those nice relations of size, proportion and color,' is a mere vagueness of speech, which may mean much, or little, or nothing, and which guides in no degree. That the true 'result of the natural style of gardening is seen rather in the absence of all defects and incongruities, than in the creation of any special wonders or miracles,' is a proposition better suited to the grovelling apprehension of the herd, than to the fervid dreams of the man of genius.
….The true poet possessed of very unusual pecuniary resources, might possibly, while retaining the necessary idea of art or interest or culture, so imbue his designs at once with extent and novelty of Beauty, as to convey the sentiment of spiritual interference. It will be seen that, in bringing about such result, he secures all the advantages of interest or design, while relieving his work of all the harshness and technicality of Art.”
Ellison’s garden is a middle state between human art and Almighty design. Its beauty is an effect in human perception, something ethereal that cannot be expressed as in landscape paintings. It is clear that technique, in itself, is not art. Art, in Ellison’s opinion, has to be imbued of spirituality to correct the imperfections of what has been given to us.

Patagonia Argentina. From Pixdau.com

REFERENCE
The Landscape Garden. In "The Complete Tales of Edgar Allan Poe". Barnes and Noble, New York. 1999

Friday, November 27, 2020

The Sea Forest of My Octopus Teacher

 

All pictures are screen shots of My Octopus Teacher from my computer. Personal archives.

We have seen enough of the Amazon rainforest wild fires to understand this is a world were humans are becoming detached from nature in their pursue of economical interests. Contrary to this, there is the work of film-maker and naturalist Craig Foster that is highlighted in Netflix documentary "My Octopus Teacher" filmed in the kelp forests of Cape Town. Regardless all the comments on Internet about the eroticism of the "love story" between Foster and an octopus, I have found the film very interesting, I enjoyed the story and the photography a lot.



Regarding this blog, I see an analogy between the (ground) forests and the kelp forests, though sometimes the difference in scale from one environment to the other may be huge. Can we say they belong to each other? Ideally yes, if we consider that catastrophic events during the Ice Age have uprooted conifers growing two miles above sea level in the Himalayas and brought them to a deep sea grave, and eventually, floods carry trees from the low lands to the sea as well.

As another conceptual parallel, I have the habit of walking among trees while smelling, touching them. It feels like immersing in the landscape. And Foster is shown swimming surrounded by kelps, explaining there is no way he would wear a wetsuit. He has to feel this environment in his body, despite the cold. What a direct example of a man attached to nature! 




For a definition of a kelp forest, I take this paragraph from the USA National Ocean Service:

"Kelp forests can be seen along much of the west coast of North America. Kelp are large brown algae that live in cool, relatively shallow waters close to the shore. They grow in dense groupings much like a forest on land. These underwater towers of kelp provide food and shelter for thousands of fish, invertebrates, and marine mammal species. 

 Kelp forests harbor a greater variety and higher diversity of plants and animals than almost any other ocean community. Many organisms use the thick blades as a safe shelter for their young from predators or even rough storms. 

 Among the many mammals and birds that use kelp forests for protection or feeding are seals, sea lions, whales, sea otters, gulls, terns, snowy egrets, great blue herons, cormorants, and shore birds. 

 These dense canopies of algae generally occur in cold, nutrient-rich waters. Because of their dependency upon light for photosynthesis, kelp forests form in shallow open waters and are rarely found deeper than 49-131 feet".

I am sharing here the beauty of these kelp forests, all pictures are screen shots of My Octopus Teacher from my computer. Foster collaborated on shooting the sequence with his friend, Blue Planet 2 cameraman Roger Horrocks. Do not reproduce without my permission.






Thursday, November 26, 2020

Gardens through Stained Glass

 

Kristin Newton. Calligraphy beyond words. 1976. Artist's collection.

As I mentioned in my first post "Inbuilt Landscape," a garden is not an ornament of the house. I intend to strengthen here the dialectics between inside and outside, without forcing the geometries, but having a fluid space where the garden or landscape participates of the house interior space as well, bringing home, wilderness, the sacred, and cultivation evolving together.
 A conceptual primary idea can be found in my previous post about arts incorporated to landscape, where the artist is working on a plastic film held by two pine trees. The spatiality of the painting becomes part of the landscape behind and around.
As an architect I see both exterior and interior as integrated spaces. And one way to enhance the house and garden connection is the use of stained glass as translucent pieces of art in between.
I am sharing here some beautiful stained glass art next to the landscape, all my pictures have been taken from the book "New Glass. Stained Glass for the Age of Handmade Houses", by Otto B. Rigan with photographs by Charles Frizzell. New York Edition, 1976.

Paul Marioni. Homage to Chicken Little. This window is located in Paul's kitchen. The sky is cracked glass. It is a beautiful twilight, regardless the stain glass theme.

Peter Mollica. An architect's office at home. California, 1973. Note the scale of the window on the left, it is designed for the seating architect. Also see the organic design and the reflection of the stained glass on the wall. 

Terry Markarian. Autonomous hanging panel. I like the motif as a sun above, or even a sunset.

Ed Carpenter. Portland residence. This is the view of the window from the backyard. See how the pond edge continues up to the wall surrounding the window. Even in a different material, the continuity is obvious in the water that becomes the glass. I would have avoided the horizontal frame though, to emphasize the water concept.

Ed Carpenter. Untitled autonomous panel, 1976. Private collection, Portland, Oregon. I see it as a bright geometrical idea, the straight vertical lines of the bamboos behind and the circle above, closing the composition. Of course I am seeing it as only one single art composition, panel plus nature.


Just monochrome wild grasses as landscape design

  Seattle Waterfront is being renovated and this year, apart from completing public buildings, new landscape and hardscape design has been a...