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Verlag: nai010 publishers, 2008
ISBN 10: 9056620290ISBN 13: 9789056620295
Anbieter: Lee Jones-Hubert, Richmond, VA, USA
Buch
Paperback. Zustand: Very Good. gift in scripted, ships same or next day with tracking.
Verlag: nai010 uitgevers/publishers, 2008
ISBN 10: 9056620290ISBN 13: 9789056620295
Anbieter: Louis Tinner Bookshop, Rotterdam, ZH, Niederlande
Buch
Zustand: , , goed exemplaar / good copy. 2008, softcover, goed exemplaar / good copy.
Verlag: NAI Publishers September 2008, 2008
ISBN 10: 9056620290ISBN 13: 9789056620295
Anbieter: Hennessey + Ingalls, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Buch
Trade Paperback. Zustand: Used - Good. A garden is not an object but a process, as the artist and gardener Ian Hamilton Finlay once observed, and one particular fascination of landscape architecture is its very real negotiation of that rocky terrain between conception and cultivation. The labors of the former, however, are not often seen by the public that experiences its material outcome. Published on the occasion of the 2008 Landscape Architecture Triennial for the exhibition at Paleis Het Loo, Apeldoorn, 'Landscapes of the Imagination' presents landscape architecture as a design discipline, recognizing it as a dialogue with an especially unruly and impermanent form. A selection of 40 original designs and sketches from the rich European heritage of garden and landscape architecture forms the core of this book. Spanning from 1600-2000, these include designs by such familiar luminaries as Le Notre, Humphrey Repton, Peter Joseph Lenne, Ernst Cramer, Gunnar Asplund and Bernard Tschumi, as well as less famed designers--including one seventeenth century amateur/commissioner. These sketches, virtually unknown among the general public or even professional circles, emphasize garden and landscape architecture as a highly skilled conceptual art. Reference materials (engravings, photographs and text) offer the reader some insight into the design of these landscapes and elucidate the process of composition. Six plans are documented in their current state in a photographic essay. Text by Erik de Jong, Christian Bertram, Michel Lafaille.