Gardens in the Modern Landscape
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Between 1937 and 1938, garden designer Christopher Tunnard published a series of articles in the British Architectural Review that rejected the prevailing English landscape style. Inspired by the principles of Modernist art and Japanese aesthetics, Tunnard called for a «new technique» in garden design that emphasized an integration of form and purpose. «The functional garden avoids the extremes both of the sentimental expressionism of the wild garden and the intellectual classicism of the 'formal' garden,» he wrote; «it embodies rather a spirit of rationalism and through an aesthetic and practical ordering of its units provides a friendly and hospitable milieu for rest and recreation.» Tunnard's magazine pieces were republished in book form as Gardens in the Modern Landscape in 1938, and a revised second edition was issued a decade later. Taken together, these articles constituted a manifesto for the modern garden, its influence evident in the work of such figures as Lawrence Halprin, Philip Johnson, and Edward Larrabee Barnes. Long out of print, the book is here reissued in a facsimile of the 1948 edition, accompanied by a contextualizing foreword by John Dixon Hunt. Gardens in the Modern Landscape heralded a sea change in the evolution of twentieth-century design, and it also anticipated questions of urban sprawl, historic preservation, and the dynamic between the natural and built environments. Available once more to students, practitioners, and connoisseurs, it stands as a historical document and an invitation to continued innovative thought about landscape architecture.
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IN THE MODERN LANDSCAPE
John Dixon Hunt, Series Editor
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6. I am indebted to Lance Neckar, who has published two essays on Tunnard: “Strident Modernism/Ambivalent Reconsiderations,” Journal of Garden History 10 (1990): 237–46, and “Christopher Tunnard: The Garden in the Modern Landscape,” in Modern Landscape Architecture: A Critical Review, ed. Marc Treib (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1993), 144–58. Also the more recent study by David Jacques and Jan Woudstra, Landscape Modernism Renounced: The Career of Christopher Tunnard (1910–1979) (New York: Routledge, 2009). This last announces on its title page “contributions by Elen Deming, David Jacques, Lance Neckar, Ann Satterthwaite and Jan Woudstra,” but the text itself does not identify them individually. It amasses a wealth of new information, somewhat unevenly packaged and not always easy to use.
7. He tried to make sense of his career in a late book, A World with a View. His early curiosity was fueled by the endless books he seems to have borrowed from the Lindley Library of the Royal Horticultural Society, details of which loans are cited by Jacques and Woudstra (see their index).
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