Daily Archives: September 21, 2014


Saturday, September 27, 4:30 pm – 7:00 pm – Garden Dialogues: The Clark, New Landscape

On September 27th, get exclusive access to a celebrated landscape in Massachusetts and hear directly from the designers and the clients about their collaborative process.

How do clients and designers work together? What makes for a great, enduring collaboration? Garden Dialogues provides unique opportunities for small groups to visit some of today’s most beautiful gardens created by some of the most accomplished designers currently in practice.

The Clark, New Landscape, will be presented by the Cultural Landscape Foundation on Saturday, September 27, from 4:30 – 7 in Williamstown, and a limited number of tickets are still available. Speakers will be Gary Hilderbrand, Reed Hilderbrand LLC, with Richard Rand, Senior Curator at The Clark and Matt Noyes, Grounds Manager at The Clark.

The new landscape and building complex at Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, part of a 140-acre campus in the Berkshire Mountains, is one of 2014s most anticipated and highly praised projects. Fourteen years in the making, the ambitious expansion campaign led by architect Tadao Ando and landscape architects Reed Hilderbrand matches the museum’s mission to facilitate the interrelationship of art and nature. The institute, a respected art museum and center for research and higher education originally chartered in 1950 and built around the Clark family’s private collection, has grown to national stature and features European and American paintings, sculpture, prints, drawings, photographs, and decorative arts from the Renaissance to the early twentieth century.

The new Clark Art Institute landscape, which opened to the public on July 4, 2014, includes four miles of new walking trails, five new pedestrian bridges, and more than a thousand new trees. The focal point of the landscape is a set of tiered reflecting pools. Conceived by Ando and designed Reed Hilderbrand, the reflecting pools orchestrate a unified composition among the diverse architectural characters of the Institute’s family of buildings and the sweeping pastoral landscape beyond.  $125.  Register at http://tclf.org/event/2014-garden-dialogues-massachusetts.


Sunday, October 5, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – Handmade for the Garden

Author Susan Guagliumi will highlight ways to enhance your outdoor space with DIY tools, pots, embellishments and more, using easy-to-find, inexpensive and repurposed materials. Gardeners of all skill levels will discover artful ways to beautify and personalize their gardens with handmade objects. Guagliumi’s book, Handmade for the Garden, will be available for purchase at this Tower Hill Botanic Garden event, to be held Sunday, October 5 from 1 – 2. Cost: Included with Admission. Free for members. For information call 508-869-6111. (Note: this program was postponed from August due to weather.)


Saturday, October 4, 9:30 am – 11:30 am – Preserving the Harvest: Jams and Chutneys

In this free Boston Natural Areas Network cooking class, learn how to preserve your bountiful harvest throughout the winter months with sweet jams and savory chutneys. The class will be held on Saturday, October 4, from 9:30 – 11:30 at the Future Chefs Office and Teaching Kitchen, 560 Albany Street in the South End. Bring your own jar with a lid. Pre-registration required: contact BNAN at 617-542-7696 or email info@bostonnatural.org.

Cranberry Shallot Relish with Cinnamon and Red Wine