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The New York Public Library



presents

* *

An Art and Literature Series
Event<http://www.nypl.org/events/programs/2012/03/14/art-and-literature-gardener%E2%80%99s-voice>



*Hear the Gardeners Voice*

* *

*Writing the Garden: A Literary Conversation Across Two Centuries***

* *

*Elizabeth Barlow Rogers*

* in conversation with*

*Laurie Olin and Paula Deitz*

* *

Wednesday March 14, 2012

6:00 P.m.

* *

Margaret Liebman Berger Forum

Room 227 (2nd Floor)



The New York Public Library

Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

5thAvenue at 42nd Street

New York, NY 10018

917-275-6975

 www.nypl.org

(directions) <http://www.nypl.org/locations/tid/36/directions>



*Room 227 opens to the public at 5:30 p.m.*

All events are FREE and subject to last minute change or cancellation.



Gardens are a series of transitory delights, temporal transactions between
humans and nature. Luckily, the creation and development of a garden is
sometimes recorded by its maker or, in some cases, by the discerning
visitor. Books by and about true gardeners constitute a special genre of
literature. *Paula
Deitz*<http://catalog.nypl.org/search%7ES48/?searchtype=a&searcharg=deitz%2C+paula&searchscope=1&sortdropdown=-&SORT=D&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=adeitz%2C+paula>
 is a distinguished journalist whose personal responses to numerous gardens
have been gathered in her recent book, *Of Gardens*, a collection of essays
that brim with sensory description. Distinguished landscape architect *Laurie
Olin*<http://catalog.nypl.org/search%7ES48/?searchtype=a&searcharg=olin%2C+laurie&searchscope=1&sortdropdown=-&SORT=D&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=aolin%2C+laurie>
 writes descriptive appreciations and annotates the gardens he visits as
well as the ones he designs with exceptional drawings. *They will join
landscape historian** **Elizabeth Barlow
Rogers<http://catalog.nypl.org/search%7ES48/?searchtype=a&searcharg=rogers%2C+elizabeth+barlow&searchscope=1&sortdropdown=-&SORT=D&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=arogers%2C+elizabeth+barlow>,
author of** **Writing the Garden: A Literary Conversation Across Two
Centuries**, in a discussion of the ways that they and others represent the
marriage of garden art and nature through words and illustrations*.



Focusing on gardeners’ words about the art of gardening, *Writing the
Garden: A Literary Conversation Across Two Centuries* by landscape
historian Elizabeth Barlow Rogers brings together a diverse array of
authors. For the most part they are not professional landscape designers or
how-to horticulturists but rather hands-on gardeners who write with their
own gardens in full view. Thus, the books Rogers discusses are ones that
constitute a love affair between the gardener and the garden. Although
horticultural love affairs are often tumultuous (nature can be
frustratingly fickle, and in dealing with weather, pests, and other
adversities, some garden writers assume a comically beleaguered persona),
the authors of these books are lovers of place, the space in nature the
writer-gardener claims as home ground, an arena for personal creative
expression. Ranging in time from Enlightenment France to modern-day New
York City, they invite the reader into the natural world of soil and
flowers, insects and sun, pride and frustration.

*Copies of the book are available for purchase and signing at the event.*

*Paula Deitz* is editor of *The Hudson Review*<http://www.hudsonreview.com/>,
a magazine of literature and the arts published in New York City. She
writes about art, architecture, and landscape design for newspapers and
magazines here and abroad. *Of Gardens*, a collection of her essays, was
published in 2010 by the University of Pennsylvania Press. These essays
record her great adventure of continual discovery, not only of the artful
beauty of individual gardens, but also of the intellectual and historical
threads that weave them into patterns of civilization, from the modest
garden for family subsistence to major urban developments. She describes
how people, over many centuries and in many lands, have expressed their
originality by devoting themselves to cultivation and conservation.

*
* <http://www.theolinstudio.com/>

*Laurie D. Olin, RLA, FASLA* <http://www.theolinstudio.com/>, is the
founding partner of OLIN, a Philadelphia-based landscape-architecture and
urban design firm. The former chair of the Department of Landscape
Architecture at Harvard University, he currently holds the title of
practice professor of landscape architecture at the University of
Pennsylvania where he has taught for over thirty years. Olin, who has
written widely on the history and theory of architecture and landscape,
co-authored with Benedetta Origo and John Dixon Hunt *La Foce: A Garden and
Landscape in Tuscany* (Penn Studies in Landscape Architecture, 2001); *Across
the Open Field: Essays Drawn from English Landscapes*(Penn Studies in
Landscape Architecture, 1999); a memoir and series of essays on the
evolution of English landscape; *Transforming the Commonplace: Selections
from Laurie Olin’s Sketchbooks* (Penn Studies in Landscape Architecture,
1997) and, with Witold Rybczynski, *Vizcaya: An American Villa and Its
Makers* (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2007), and the history and
design of James Deering’s extraordinary Italianate mansion in *Coconut
Grove, Florida, and A Life Spent Changing Places* (2011).



*Elizabeth Barlow Rogers <http://www.elizabethbarlowrogers.com/>* is the
president of the Foundation for Landscape Studies. As a landscape
preservationist, she is best known for her role in founding the Central
Park Conservancy in 1981. As president of the Conservancy, she guided the
restoration and management renewal of Central Park until 1996 when she
returned to her earlier career as a landscape historian and educator. Her
published works include *The Forests and Wetlands of New York City*(Boston:
Little, Brown and Company, 1971), *Frederick Law Olmsted's New York* (Whitney
Museum/Praeger, 1972), *Rebuilding Central Park: A Management and
Restoration* Plan (The MIT Press, 1987), *Landscape Design: A Cultural and
Architectural History* (Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 2001),*Romantic Gardens:
Nature, Art, and Landscape Design* (Morgan Library and Museum and
Foundation for Landscape Studies in association with David R. Godine,
Publisher, 2010) and *Writing the Garden: A Literary Conversation Across
Two Centuries* (New York Society Library and Foundation for Landscape
Studies in association with David R. Godine, Publisher, 2011).



Conceived and organized by Arezoo Moseni, *Art and Literature*
*Series*events bring forth pollinations across the literary and visual
arts with
readings and discussions by acclaimed artists and authors.


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