Daily Archives: October 21, 2010


Friday, November 5, 7:30 pm – From Art to Landscape: Unleashing Creativity

Garden designers face some daunting questions: How do I begin the creative process? Where can I find design inspiration? How will I know if my design is successful? Join W. Gary Smith in the Carroll Room at the Smith College Botanic Garden on Friday, November 5, beginning at 7:30 pm,  to explore how to approach these questions as an artist. With an artist’s tools and ways of looking at the world, you will be able to design gardens that combine the unique character of a place with your innermost creative spirit.

One of North America’s leading landscape designers, W. Gary Smith specializes in botanical gardens and arboretums, as well as public art installations and private gardens, often weaving together local ecological and cultural themes.

He received the national Award of Distinction from the Association of Professional Landscape Designers for his work on Enchanted Woods at Winterthur Museum & Country Estate in Delaware and for Peirce’s Woods at Longwood Gardens and the Stopford Family Meadow Maze at Tyler Arboretum, both in Pennsylvania. Peirce’s Woods also received a Design Merit Award from the American Society of Landscape Architects. His recent work includes the new Santa Fe Botanical Garden, the Gardens Master Plan and the Children’s Garden at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin, Texas, the Discovery Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, and the Therapeutic Garden at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens in Alabama.

Free admission. For more information, log on to www.smith.edu/garden/Home/visitorinfo.html, or call 413-585-2740.


Monday, November 1, 7:00 pm – Smithsonian Ocean: Our Water, Our World

The New England Aquarium has been providing free lectures and films by scientists, environmental writers, photographers and others since 1972. The Aquarium Lecture Series is presented free to the public through the generosity of the Lowell Institute, which has been providing funding for free public lectures at universities and museums since 1836.

With striking imagery from her book Smithsonian Ocean: Our Water, Our World, author Deborah Cramer makes a powerful case for a basic truth about the ocean: we need the sea, and now the sea needs us.

Lectures are free and open to the public. Registration is requested. The program will start at 7 p.m. in the Aquarium’s Harborside Learning Lab, will last approximately one hour, and will be followed by a reception. To register, call Amanda Kelley at 617-269-7171, or log on to www.neaq.org.

Smithsonian Ocean: Our Water Our World