just about to be published

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Linda brought by my desk the 2009 Spring cat­a­log of the Prince­ton Archi­tec­tural Press. She really like the photo on the cover, a plant­ing by Andrea Cochran, a San Francisco-based land­scape archi­tect and the sub­ject of a new book, Andrea Chochran: Land­scapes, which is just about to be pub­lished. (The project shown is the Ivy Street Roof Ter­race Hayes Val­ley Roof Gar­den in San Francisco.)

You may recall that Linda is a quil­ter, and the cover design really looks quilt-like in the way it’s put together: blocks of dif­fer­ent plant­i­ngs (not just blocks of sin­gle kinds of plants), all assem­bled together so that one group­ing of plants con­trasts dra­mat­i­cally against another, like one pat­terned fab­ric in a quilt that’s been set against another. In fact the author of of the book describes Cochan’s work as “stud­ies in rep­e­ti­tion and order, orches­tra­tions of move­ment in the land­scape, and ele­ments placed in geo­met­ric conversation”–which almost sounds like the prin­ci­ples oper­at­ing behind many quilts.


Check out Andrea Cochran’s web­site for other exam­ples of her strong, lin­ear land­scape designs.

Thumb­ing through the cat­a­log I ran across another title that made me stop for a closer look, Bam­boo Fences, by Isao Yoshikawa and Osamu Suzuki. The cat­a­log says that the book “pro­vides a detailed look at the com­plex art of bam­boo fence design in Japan, pre­sent­ing these unique struc­tures in over 250 pho­tographs and line draw­ings. From the widely used ‘four-eyed fence’ (yotsume-gaki) and the fine ‘rain­coat fence’ (mino-gaki) to the expen­sive ‘spice­bush fence’ (kuromoji-gaki), these exquis­ite designs impress with their sim­ple beauty, pro­vid­ing plenty of inspi­ra­tion for your own bam­boo fence.

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Author Isao Yoshikawa gives a brief overview of the his­tory of bam­boo fence build­ing in Japan and clas­si­fies the dif­fer­ent designs by type. A glos­sary pro­vides expla­na­tion of Japan­ese fence names and struc­tural terms.”

Of course, fences like this prob­a­bly wouldn’t work so well if your house is in the Tudor or Span­ish taste. Unless of course you want your home to develop a “home store Gothic” look that one writer called the look that sub­ur­ban houses accrue over time as their own­ers buy what­ever strikes their fancy at the local Home Depot, his­tor­i­cal accu­racy and style be damned.

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But imag­ine these around a clean-lined mod­ern house. In fact, Richard Neu­tra was known to like his glass-walled homes to look out on a Japanese-styled land­scape. And some of the more geo­met­ric ver­sions might even look amaz­ing behind a land­scape designed the the sub­ject of the first book.…

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Above: Images from the book, pho­tographed by Osamu Suzuki.

January 28 2009 | Categories: gardeninglandscape design | Tags: | 5 Comments »