“away from the soft pornography of the flower”">away from the soft pornography of the flower”

The quote in the title is from a state­ment by Charles Wald­heim about the work of land­scape designer Piet Oudolf in a Jan­u­ary 31 arti­cle in the New York Times, “A land­scape in win­ter, dying hero­ically.” (I ran across this in a post to Alexan­der Trevi’s inter­est­ing Pruned blog.)


Pho­tos by Her­man Wouters for the New York Times article.

One of Oudolf’s inter­ests is in con­struct­ing land­scapes that acknowl­edge the cycles of nature, the brown­ing and the dying, along with the green­ing and regrowth.

You look at this, and it goes deeper than what you see,” Oudolf is quoted. “It reminds you of some­thing in the genes—nature, or the long­ing for nature.”

You accept death. You don’t take the plants out, because they still look good. And brown is also a color.”

These are gar­dens about deeper things. They’re as beau­ti­ful as all those merely skin-deep gar­dens, but they’re so much more nour­ish­ing. I wrote ear­lier refer­ring to a com­ment about Monet’s gar­dens being designed to expose nat­ural processes. Oudolf’s gar­dens do the same thing, and I’d love to be able spend some time lost in his landscapes…

Piet Oudolf’s website.

April 09 2008 06:30 am | Categories: gardeninglandscape design | Tags:

One Response to “away from the soft pornography of the flower””

  1. [ Lost in the Landscape ] » brown is in on 20 Aug 2008 at 4:47 am #

    […] I was inspired by the gar­den designs of Piet Oudolf. Maybe I was inspired by my recent trip to see things turn­ing brown in Los Peñas­qui­tos Preserve. […]

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