9.28.2006

Cooper-Hewitt Landscape Design Awards 2006

The Cooper-Hewitt recently announced their 2006 National Design Awards. Three lucky Landscape Architects were recognized for advancing the fields of urban planning, park, and garden design. I , myself, am a gardener who leans towards ADD styles and eclectic designs, I often find the field of Landscape Design fairly dull and overintellectualized. I guess a nicer way to put it: Landscapes are all-too-often groomed to perfection, giving a hands off appearance. To me, its about as inviting as a glass wall, appealing to my voyeuristic self, but an over-exposed and generally unrelaxing space. So, in an effort to understand the judges' approach a bit better, I asked around to see what others, more trained in the field, thought. Not surprisingly, they schooled me.

Tom Christopher, House and Garden Magazine: I was shocked - no, mortally offended - the first time I came across Martha Schwartz's work many years ago in photographs of the notorious "bagel garden" that she created in 1979 for her then husband, Peter Walker. To someone like myself with a horticultural background (and maybe a deficient sense of humor) Schwartz's gardens were a slap in the face. They still are. But today, I find that bracing.
A painter in three dimensions and a sculptor of space, Schwartz is a very serious artist who doesn
't take herself too seriously. Who can help plant-centric types such as myself to relate to the outdoors in a new way. Schwartz's work still makes me nervous, but that I think is part of her aim. She takes risks and demands the same of her public.
What Martha Schwartz is doing is both new and not so. In her treatment of garden design as a fine art, and in her blurring the line between landscape, sculpture, and the graphic arts, she is, consciously or not, reaching way back to a time when it was a Raphael or a Michelangelo the pope would hire to design the Vatican
garden, not the guy from the local garden center. Though if they had responded with bagels, excommunication would have been a sure thing.

Ken Smith worked with Peter Walker and Martha Schwartz early in his career and the experience
may be partly responsible for the sculptural quality of his own work, notable especially in the glowing topiary garden he created as a winter solstice celebration at New York's Liberty Plaza. Coupled with this, though, is a fascination with natural processes that I suspect must date to his childhood on an Iowa farm. As a gardener, I respond especially to his involvement with natural processes: the bloom of the great dumpster planters he created for a city schoolyard, or the rain curtain (a curtain of icicles in winter) that he installed in a Toronto Park.Which brings me at last to Andrea Cochran who also reshapes traditional concepts of the garden, but does so, in my opinion, as an musician. I have no idea whether Cochran has ever even picked up\nan instrument, but her use of stone, glass, steel and plants has an lyric, rhythmical swing that sings out wherever she sets to work. Sometimes in symphonies, other times in just a brief harmony, butalways clear, sweet, and strong.

Which brings me at last to Andrea Cochran who also reshapes traditional concepts of the garden, but does so, in my opinion, as a musician. I have no idea whether Cochran has ever even picked up an instrument, but her use of stone, glass, steel and plants has a lyric, rhythmical swing that sings out wherever she sets to work. Sometimes in symphonies, other times in just a brief harmony, but always clear, sweet, and strong.

Heather Rhoades, This Garden is Illegal blogger: I always think of this kind of this stuff as similar to fashion shows. In fashion shows you see all sorts of gorgeous models in funky but stunning outfits. Of course you will never look like that model and you would not be caught dead in public in that outfit, but on a runway, that outfit is awesome.
Same deal here. Wow. Looks stunning, but would you really want it in your yard?
It will make changes to
the future of landscaping, maybe. But interesting to look at in the mean time.

Ivette Soler, The Germinatrix: Could anyone BUT Martha Schwartz have one the Cooper-Hewitt Design Award for Landscape Design? Hers is work not to be ignored - it takes you by the lapels (if you happen to be wearing a jacket) and shakes you, screaming “I AM ART!” Is her work deserving of the award ?-Well, yes. Her work has without a doubt contributed to the field of landscape design - but I must confess an ambivalence about it. I’m not sure that I want landscapes to be as aesthetically rigorous as hers are. Or as aware of their own greatness as hers seem to be. I’ve always loved the work of finalist Andrea Cochran, which is bold, forward - thinking and architectural, while retaining lyricism and a sense of ease. Martha Schwartz has worked very hard to earn this award, and I think you really see the effort. Not to be bitchy or anything.

Gayla Trail, You Grow Girl Human - of - All - Trades: The prize is for "exemplary work in urban planning or park and garden design." These designers are pushing the limits of park design but I have a tendency to view gardens and parks as places with plants... I'm not a fan of these concrete "parks" that are showing up in cities. Examples "Millennium Park" (with the giant bean) in Chicago and "Dundas Square" here in Toronto.
I prefer the work of finalist Andrea Cochran because her designs include plants... but then again there's a lot of lawn instead of concrete...
I like the first one by Ken Smith, "Queen's Schoolyard." It looks warm and inviting... like a garden.
So really my abrupt comment: "Too much lawn for my taste." is succinct but appropriate. Although perhaps it should read, "Too much lawn and concrete for my taste."


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey
I think you have mixed up what Profesional Landscape Designers do as opposed to what Landscape Architects design for public spaces.

I think you do a grea dis-service to both professions by blurring the lines of both professions. Yes there is some cross over. However when it comes to large public installations that are very high profile they almost always fall under the pervue of Landscape Architects.

What professional Designers do in the residential arena is completely different, even in the case of high-profile residential commissions.

Wolfie and the Sneak said...

Rick
While I think I have a fairly good grasp of the difference between Designers and Architects, I would like for you to post your more linear explanation here, if you wish.

I am sorry you feel I am doing a disservice with my subjective interpretation of both fields, but critiques sometimes come across in such a way.

Thank you for your response, maybe we can get a good dialogue going on the subject.