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Planting Dreams: Shaping Australian gardens

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Planting Dreams: Shaping Australian gardens

Contributors:

By (Author) Richard Aitken

ISBN:

9781742234649

Publisher:

NewSouth Publishing

Imprint:

NewSouth Publishing

Publication Date:

1st September 2016

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

635.0994

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

272

Dimensions:

Width 230mm, Height 280mm

Description

'A garden should be just a little too big to keep the whole cultivated. Then it gives it a chance to go a little wild in spots' Edna Walling, landscape designer

Waratah or wattle Chrysanthemum or rosePlanting Dreamscelebrates the artistry and imagination that have shaped Australian gardens. Respected garden historian Richard Aitken explores the environmental and social influences that have helped produce our unique gardening culture from Indigenous land management and the earliest European garden at Farm Cove, to the potted plants and besser block screens of mid-twentieth century modernist design and beyond.

Drawing on the unparalleled collections of the State Library of New South Wales,Planting Dreamsshowcases Australian garden makingin all its richness and diversitythrough a stunning and intriguing mix of paintings, sketches, photographs, and prints, from popular culture to high art.

'An elegant look at the miraculous gardening evolution' Indira Naidoo, author of TheEdible Balcony

Author Bio

Richard Aitken is recognised internationally for his expertise in the field of garden history. He has been a long-time editor of Australian Garden History, the quarterly journal of the Australian Garden History Society, and his books include The Oxford Companion to Australian Gardens (2002), Gardenesque (2004), Botanical Riches (2006), Seeds of Change (2006), The Garden of Ideas (2010), and Cultivating Modernism (2013).

Aitken has curated several major exhibitions and undertaken numerous conservation plans for significant gardens throughout Australia, including government house gardens in Sydney, Melbourne, and Hobart; botanic gardens in Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, and regional Victoria; and many other public and private gardens.

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