Art, Design, Beauty - Quotes, Poems, Wisdom for Gardeners (original) (raw)

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Quotes for Gardeners and Lovers of the Green Way

Compiled by Michael P. Garofalo

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"We seem to have lost contact with the earlier, more profound functions of art, which have always had to do with personal and collective empowerment, personal growth, communion with this world, and the search for what lies beneath and above this world." - Peter London, No More Second Hand Art

"All gardening is landscape painting." - Alexander Pope

"By means of microscopic observation and astronomical projection the lotus flower can become the foundation for an entire theory of the universe and an agent whereby we may perceive Truth." - Yukio Mishima

"It isn't that I don't like sweet disorder, but it has to be judiciously arranged." - Vita Sackville West

"Poetry is the art of creating imaginary gardens with real toads." - Marianne Moore

"Nothing is more the child of art than a garden."
- Sir Walter Scott

"A garden without its statue is like a sentence without its verb." - Joseph W. Beach

"I believe it is no wrong Observation, that Persons of Genius, and those who are most capable of Art, are always fond of Nature, as such are chiefly sensible, that all Art consists in the Imitation and Study of Nature. On the contrary, People of the common Level of Understanding are principally delighted with the Little Niceties and Fantastical Operations of Art, and constantly think that finest which is least Natural." - Alexander Pope, 1713

"We have learned that more of the "earth-earthiness" would solve our social problems, remove many isms from our vocabulary, and purify our art. And so we often wish that those who interpret life for us by pen or brush would buy a trowel and pack of seeds." - Ruth R. Blodgett (1883-), The House Beautiful (March 1918)

"Liberal gardeners are people who feel that, through gardening, we can alleviate our sense of alienation from nature; and that, through good gardening, we can repair some of the damage we have done to our environment. The most extreme liberals believe that there is an original or a natural state in which the environment would be if we hadn't shown up on the scene, and that we have not only the ability but also a moral imperative to help nature return to this state." - Deborah Needleman

"In the creation of a garden, the architect invites the partnership of the Kingdom of Nature. In a beautiful garden the majesty of nature is ever present, but it is nature reduced to human proportions and thus transformed into the most efficient haven against the aggressiveness of contemporary life." - Luis Barrag�n, Mexico

"Gardening as far as Gardening is Art, or entitled to that appellation, is a deviation from nature; for if the true taste consists, as many hold, in banishing every appearance of Art, or any traces of the footsteps of man, it would then be no longer a Garden." - Joshua Reynolds, Thirteenth Discourse, 1786

"There is no "The End" to be written, neither can you, like an architect, engrave in stone the day the garden was finished; a painter can frame his picture, a composer notate his coda, but a garden is always on the move." - Mirabel Osler

"Even while we study and master the individual tasks and lessons of gardening, the garden remains as a place that is far greater than the sum of its parts. After plant infatuations, color schemes, and double digging, there is still the essence of the garden, the central theme that invites our attention. Happily, the exploration and creation of the garden goes on. . . . and on . . . and on. . ." - Lynn Purse, The Creative Gardener

"Nothing is more completely the child of art than a garden." - Sir Walter Scott

"To tell you the truth, my tenants have a notion that I am atheistically inclined, by putting up heathen statues and writing on them certain words in an unknown language. They immediately suspected me for a papist, and my statues had been demolished, my woods burnt and my throat cut had not I suddenly placed a seat under a holly bush with this plain inscription, "Sit Down and Welcome." I have assured them that all the Latin mottoes are to this purpose, and that in places where they cannot sit down, I have desired them in the old Norman dialect to go to the lodge, and drink whiskey."
- Lord John Orrey (1707-1762), Letters

"Poets and novelists are often moved to put into words the subtle qualities of the landscape, sometime purely for the beauty of it, and sometimes as a way of alluding to certain human feelings. Landscape design can translate such literary landscapes into three-dimensional form in the garden. Like the poet, the garden designer may allude to human feelings in his portrayals of nature." - David S. Slawson, Secret Teachings in the Art of Japanese Gardens, 1987, p. 131

"Beauty is the adjustment of all parts proportionately so that one cannot add or subtract or change without impairing the harmony of the whole." - Leon B. Alberti

"The work of art is born of the intelligence's refusal to reason the concrete. It marks the triumph of the carnal."
- Albert Camus

Writing and Being: Embracing Your Life Through Creative Journaling
Keeping a Nature Journal: Discover a Whole New Way of Seeing the World Around You
Journal to the Self: Twenty-Two Paths to Personal Growth
How to Keep a Naturalist's Notebook
Visual Journaling: Going Deeper than Words
Nature Journaling: Learning to Observe and Connect with the World Around You
Writing Down Your Soul: How to Activate and Listen to the Extraordinary Voice Within
Mixed-Media Nature Journals: New Techniques for Exploring Nature, Life, and Memories
Creative Wildfire: An Introduction to Art Journaling - Basics and Beyond
Inner Journeying Through Art-Journaling: Learning to See And Record Your Life As a Work of Art

"We have art in order not to perish of truth."
- Friedrich Nietzsche

"Every garden is unique with a multitude of choices in soils, plants and themes. Finding your garden theme is as easy as seeing what brings a smile to your face." - Teresa Watkins, Gardening With Soul

"Remember that gardeners generally want to share knowledge and hear your comments, so don't be shy about starting a conversation. Like artists, most gardeners want to know how their creation communicates with the viewer. See if you can discover the spirit and vision behind the garden and reflect on what is moved within you. - Suzanne Edison, Ask Questions

"Don't underestimate the therapeutic value of gardening. It's the one area where we can all use our nascent creative talents to make a truly satisfying work of art. Every individual, with thought, patience and a large portion of help from nature, has it in them to create their own private paradise: truly a thing of beauty and a joy for ever."
- Geoff Hamilton, Paradise Gardens, 1997

Fine art is that in which the hand, the head, and the heart of man go together.
- John Ruskin

A statue in a garden is to be considered as one part of a scene or landscape. - Shenstone

Aesthetics is for the artists as
ornithology is for the birds.
- Barnett Newman

It has been the office of art to educate the perception of beauty. We are immersed in beauty but our eyes have no clear vision. - Ralph Waldo Emerson

Art consists of limitation. The most beautiful part of every picture is the frame. - G. K. Chesterton

Good planting design does not follow a formula. At best, it allows you to experiment with nature and through nature to make an original statement. As in all of the arts, the best garden designers take risks. Only by taking risks can you come up with something exciting and original. - James Van Sweden

Illustrated Guides to Food Plants
Green Inheritance: Saving the Plants of the Worldby Anthony Huxley
Medicinal Plants of the Worldby Ben Eric van Wyk
Edible: An Illustrated Guide to the World's Food Plantsby National Geographic
Vegetables, Herbs and Fruit: An Illustrated Encyclopediaby Matthew Biggs
Food Plants of the World: An Illustrated Guideby Ben Eric van Wyk
The New Oxford Book of Food Plantsby John Vaughan
The New Oxford Book of Food Plantsby Elizabeth Schneider

"What we call yugen lies within the mind and cannot be expressed in words. Its quality may be suggested by the sight of a gauzy cloud veiling the moon or by the autumnal mists swathing the scarlet leaves on a mountainside. If one is asked where yugen can be found in these sights, one cannot say; a man who cannot understand this truth is quite likely to prefer the sight of the moon shining brightly in a cloudless sky. It is quite impossible to explain wherein lies the interest or wonder of yugen." - Shotetsu, in Donald Keene's No: The Classical Theatre of Japan.

Texture and foliage keep a garden interesting through the season.
Flowers are just moments of gratification.
- Kevin Doyle

The garden must first be prepared in the soul first or else it will not flourish. - Proverb from England

The Japanese garden is a very important tool in Japanese architectural design because, not only is a garden traditionally included in any house design, the garden itself also reflects a deeper set of cultural meanings and traditions. Whereas the English garden seeks to make only an aesthetic impression, the Japanese garden is both aesthetic and reflective. The most basic element of any Japanese garden design comes from the realization that every detail has a significant value. - Elizabeth Barber, The Shiga Project: The Japanese Garden

Gardens are the result of a collaboration between art and nature.
- Penelope Hobhouse

If the art of gardening is at last to turn back from her extravagances and rest with her other sisters, it is, above everything, necessary to have clearly before you what you require . . . It is certainly tasteless and inconsistent to desire to encompass the world with a garden-wall, but very practicable and reasonable to make a garden . . . into a characteristic whole to the eye, heart, and understanding alike. - Schiller

In his garden every man may be his own artist without apology
or explanation. Each within his green enclosure is a creator,
and no two shall reach the same conclusion; nor shall we, any
more than other creative workers, be ever wholly satisfied with
our accomplishment. Ever a season ahead of us floats the vision
of perfection and herein lies its perennial charm.
- Louise Beebe Wilder

The aesthetically literate person also knows that the artistic dimensions of existence have meaning for every sphere of human endeavor ... and that a refined aesthetic sensibility can as easily lead to a cure for cancer as to the composition of a great symphony.
- James Fenwick

Quality means doing it right when no one is looking.
- Henry Ford

"The first law of a painting and of a picture on the soil is to be a whole . . . Without principles and without discernment one never attains veritable beauty." - Edouard Andr�

Art brings out the grand lines of nature.
- Antoine Bourdelle

To some, gardening is therapy for the mind. Art is therapy for my soul. - Reno

If light is the medium and space is the medium, then, in a sense, the universe is a medium. I know the impracticality of it right now but when I say that the medium is the universe, that maybe the world is an art form, then the gardening of our universe or our consciousness would be the level of our art participation. Robert Irwin

Art attempts to find in the universe, in matter as well as in the facts of life, what is fundamental, enduring, essential. - Saul Bellow

In a rock garden we foster a little patch of the wilderness that stands to us for freedom. - Jason Hill

"Rhythm, symmetry, and a happy combination of elegance and utility - a blend often desired in later days of hope and struggle - these have been fully attained, and with them a delight in quiet communion with Nature, expressing as she does the sense of beauty in orderliness." - Marie Luise Gothein, History of Garden Art, 1928
Commenting on the Egyptian tomb pictures of the home and gardens of the official Meten, circa 1440 BCE
"Right on to the New Period vineyard arbors were the centre and chief ornament of all gardens."

Romanticism may not inaccurately be described as a conviction that the world is an englischer Garten on a grand scale. The God of the seventeenth century, like its gardeners, always geometrized; the God of Romanticism was one in whose universe things grew wild and without trimming and in all the rich diversity of their natural shapes. The preference for irregularity, the aversion from that which is wholly intellectualized ... which were eventually to invade the intellectual life of Europe at all points, made their first modern appearance on a grand scale in the eighteenth century in the form of the new fashion in pleasure gardens. - Arthur O. Lovejoy, The Great Chain of Being, 1936

Gardening is always more or less a warfare against nature. It is true we go over to the "other side" for a few hints, but we might as well abandon our spades and pitchforks as pretend that nature is everything and art nothing. - James Shirley Hibberd

In garden arrangement, as in all other kinds of decorative work, one has not only to acquire a knowledge of what to do, but also to gain some wisdom in perceiving what it is well to let alone. - Gertrude Jekyll

For most of us who are intimidated by theories of garden design,
the cottage garden provides immediate appeal, since it is a
horticultural rather than an architectural solution to a limited area.
- Patricia Thorpe

Art and science have their meeting point in method. - Edward Bulwer-Lytton

Laying out grounds may be considered a liberal art, in some sort like poetry and painting. - William Wordsworth

Gardening is the slowest of the performing arts.
- Anonymous

What a dead thing is a clock, with its ponderous embowelments of lead and brass, its pert or solemn dullness of communication, compared with the simple altar-like structure and silent heart-language of the old sundials! It stood as the garden god of Christian gardens. Why is it almost everywhere vanished? If its business-use be superseded by more elaborate inventions, its moral uses, its beauty, might have pleaded for its continuance. It spoke of moderate labours, of pleasures not protracted after sunset, of temperance, and good hours. It was the primitive clock, the horologue of the first world. Adam could scare have missed it in Paradise. - Charles Lamb, Essays, 1823

From the intimate union of art and nature, of architecture and landscape, will be born the best gardening compositions which Time, purifying public taste, now promises to bring us.
- Edouard Andr�

A fine garden being no less difficult to contrive and order well than a good building.
- A. J. Dezallier D'Argenville, The Theory and Practice of Gardening, 1712

But who can paint Like Nature? Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creation, hues like hers? James Thomson, 1700-1748, Spring

Like music and art, love of nature is a common language that can transcend political or social boundaries. - Jimmy Carter

For we must bear in mind that the greater number of garden pictures known to us are taken from tombs. - Marie Luise Gothein, A History of Garden Art, 1928

Should it not be remembered that in setting a garden we are painting - a picture
of hundreds of feet or yards instead of so many inches, painted with living flowers
and seen by open daylight - so that to paint it rightly is a debt that we owe to the
beauty of flowers and to the light of the sun.
- William Robinson, The English Flower Garden and Home Grounds, 1883

A flower without a stem, is beauty waiting to die. A heart without love, is a tear waiting to cry.

All art is the expression of one and the same thing-- the relation of the spirit of man to the spirit of other men and to the world. - Ansel Adams

Perhaps, the highest pleasure in art is identical with the highest
pleasure in scientific theory. The emotion which accompanies
the clear recognition of unity in a complex seems so similar in
art and in science that it is difficult not to suppose that they are
psychologically the same. It is, as it were, the final stage of both
processes. This unity-emotion in science supervenes upon a
process of pure mechanical reasoning; in art it supervenes
upon a process of which emotion has all along been an
essential concomitant.
- Roger Fry (1866-1934), "Art and Science," Vision and Design (1920).

You will find that my compositions in gardening are altogether after the Pindaric manner, and run into the beautiful wildness of Nature without affecting the nicer elegancies of art. - Addison

Here is one spot where each may experience "the romance of possibility." - Louise Beebe Wilder

Poet: gardener of epitaphs. - Octavio Paz, Return, 1975

We use our gardens as a refuge, much as a painter uses canvas, as an area to be created according to our own suitably reassuring, aesthetic taste. Henry H. Cabot, Chairman of the Garden Conservancy, 1999

"Gardens unite artificial and natural beauty, embracing all the natural elements - water, light, air, growth - and making them elements of art. Every effort devoted to garden design becomes a mirror of the longing for happiness in harmony with nature."
- Carl F. Schroer

I choose a block of marble and chop off whatever I don't need. - Francois-Auguste Rodin (1840-1917), sculptor

I have left almost to the last the magic of water, an element which owing to its changefulness of form and mood and colour and to the vast range of its effects is ever the principal source of landscape beauty, and has like music a mysterious influence over the mind. - Sir George Sitwell, On the Making of Gardens, 1909

Art is frozen Zen - R.H. Blyth

In all places where there is a Summer and a Winter, and where your Gardens of
pleasure are sometimes clothed with their verdant garments, and bespangled with
variety of Flowers, and at other times wholly dismantled of all these; here to
recompense the loss of past pleasures, and to buoy up their hopes of another
Spring, many have placed in their Gardens, Statues, and Figures of several
Animals, and great variety of other curious pieces of Workmanship, that their
walks might be pleasant at any time in those places of never dying pleasures.
- John Worlidge, Systema Horticulturae, 1677

I need not print a line, nor conjure with the painter's
tools to prove myself an artist ... Whilst in other spheres
of labor the greater part of our life's toil and moil will of a
surety end, as the wise man predicted, in vanity and
vexation of spirit, here is instant physical refreshment
in the work the garden entails, and, in the end,
our labor will be crowned with flowers.
- John Sedding, 1893

Nature is painting for us, day after day, pictures of infinite beauty. - James Russell Lowell

Today the art of gardening is practised much more often than
any other, in ignorant, impulsive ways, by people who never
stop to think that it is an art at all.
- M.G. Van Rensselaer

To conquer a piece of earth and make it as beautiful as one can dream of it being: That is art, too. A man cannot be separated from the earth. I come out of the garden every day feeling, oh, inspired in a way that one needs in order to convert the daily-ness of the life into something greater than that little life itself. - Stanley Kunitz

Form follows function. - Louis Henri Sullivan

The richness I achieve comes from Nature,
the source of my inspiration.
- Claude Monet

"There is something in us that loves symmetry, selection, arrangement, as well as wildness and irregularity. A small garden, accordingly, gives its owner a far greater opportunity to express himself than a small lawn. The usual lawn expresses nothing so much a vacancy of mind or an impious waste of good material; whereas in a garden any man may be an artist, may experiment with all the subtleties or simplicities of line, mass, color, and composition, and taste the god-like joys of the creator."
- H. G. Dwight, Gardens and Gardening,Atlantic Monthly, 1912

Surely green is the color of Pan, god of Life ... It is all around, so omnipotent that it is no longer recognized as a coulour in its own right. - Nori and Sandra Pope, Colour by Design

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The garden reconciles human art and wild nature, hard work and deep pleasure, spiritual practice and the material world. It is a magical place because it is not divided. The many divisions and polarizations that terrorize a disenchanted world find peaceful accord among mossy rock walls, rough stone paths, and trimmed bushes. Maybe a garden sometimes seems fragile, for all its earth and labor, because it achieves such an extraordinary delicate balance of nature and human life, naturalness and artificiality. It has its own liminality, its point of balance between great extremes. - Thomas Moore, The Re-Enchantment of Everyday Life

To affect the quality of the day, that is the highest of arts. - Henry David Thoreau

But where only a free play of our presentational powers is to be sustained as in the case of pleasure gardens, room decoration, all sorts of useful utensils, and so on, any regularity that has an air of constraint is to be avoided as much as possible. That is why the English taste in gardens, or the baroque taste in furniture, carries the imagination's freedom very far, even to the verge of the grotesque, because it is precisely this divorce from any constraint of a rule that the case is posited where taste can show its greatest perfection in designs made by the imagination.
- Immanuel Kant, Critique of Aesthetic Judgment, 1790, Part I, 22

There is little doubt that Impressionist landscape paintings are the most widely known and appreciated works of art ever produced. - A Day in the County: Impressionism and the French Landscape, Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Form is never more than an extension of content. - Robert Creeley, 1974

There is nothing more difficult for a truly creative painter
than to paint a rose, because before he can do so he has
first to forget all the roses that were ever painted.
- Henri Matisse

When nations grow old, the arts grow cold and commerce settles on every tree. - William Blake

If the world were clear, art would not exist.
- Albert Camus

"It seemed to my friend that the creation of a landscape-garden offered to the proper muse the most magnificent of opportunities. Here indeed was the fairest field for the display of the imagination, in the endless combining of forms of novel beauty."
- Poe

Painting is closely related to gardening but closer still is poetry. - Robert Dash

If you ask me what I came to do in this world, I, an artist, will answer you: I am here to live out loud. - Emile Zola

I am writing in the garden. To write as one should of a garden one must
write not outside it or merely somewhere near it, but in the garden.
- Frances Hodgson Burnett

In the end, color combinations come down to our personal preferences,
which we must discover through observation and experiment.
- Montagu Don

Recommended Reading

Art & Crafts The Best Source on the Net!!

Beauty - Quotes for Gardeners

Clearwater Landscapes

Color by Design: Planting Effects for the Contemporary GardenerBy Penelope Hobhouse.

Feng Shui Ultimate Resource

Feng Shui Society

Flowers - Quotes for Gardeners

Garden Art Man - Rusty Metal Garden Art Ken Shearer.

Garden Designer

Garden Design Web Sites By Kirk Johnson

Garden of Metaphor: Recent Paintings by Chong Keun Chu

Landscape USA.Com

Links to Japanese Gardens

Claude Monet's Garden Paintings

The Tea Cult of Japan By Yasunoke Fukukita

3D Garden Composer

Zen in the Art of Flower Arrangement by Gustie L. Herrigel, 1958.

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The Spirit of Gardening Website

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