Daily Archives: October 20, 2018


Saturday, October 20 – Sunday, October 21 – The Cultural Landscape Foundation’s 14th Annual Silent Auction

Here’s your chance to get rare watercolors by Lawrence Halprin, drawings by Laurie Olin, and a superb Roberto Burle-Marx lithograph; plus artwork by Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Mo Money, Dan Tague and Pat Pickett. These items and more – including the Ken Smith limited edition yellow traffic cones “NORMAL” and “HARDCORE” – are featured at TCLF’s annual silent auction of artwork by award-winning landscape architects, artists, photographers, and allied professionals. This event is guaranteed to be a highlight of the ASLA Annual Meeting and EXPO at the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia, October 20-21. As in recent years, the auction is being presented online, giving those who will not be able to attend the ASLA Annual Meeting the opportunity to bid.

Bidding is now live—REGISTER AND BID AT https://tclf2018.auction-bid.org/microsite/ Proceeds benefit the Pioneers of American Landscape Design Oral History Project, an ever-growing, award-winning series of videotaped first-person interviews with significant practitioners. TCLF is grateful for the generous support of our auction donors and our Annual Sponsor, the ASLA. Their continued commitment to this project ensures that the funds raised go directly to support TCLF’s programming. In 2003, TCLF launched the Pioneers of American Landscape Design initiative in partnership with the ASLA, with the goal of documenting, collecting, and preserving the unique, first-hand perspectives of renowned landscape practitioners.

If you have any questions about the bidding process or would like to learn more about the auction, please contact Ayla Mangold at ayla@tclf.org, or (202) 483-0553.

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Monday, November 5, 8:00 am – 4:30 pm – Season’s End Summit: The Sensory Garden – Elements to Enrich Every Landscape

As designers we aspire to create remarkable landscapes for ourselves, landscapes primarily measured in terms of visual, ecological, and functional appeal. Yet all of our senses are engaged as we experience the space and weigh the merits of the landscapes we enter. With planning, a sensory garden can deliver elements that involve all of the senses and ultimately deepen our connections with the space. In a culture dominated by technology, professional and amateur landscape designers have a unique opportunity to provide a rich experience for clients so that once disconnected from work, screen, headphones, and device, they can enjoy a multi-faceted garden that engages all of the senses and reconnects the soul.

The Ecological Landscape Alliance invites you to slow down for one day on November 5 to contemplate a sensory-inspired journey into landscape design. Attend ELA’s 9th Annual Season’s End Summit as we explore sensory design elements, not just for specialty gardens but for every garden. Challenge the status quo, learn new approaches, reconnect with colleagues, and get inspired to embrace sensory dimensions in your next designs.

Tovah Martin – The Garden in Every Sense and Season
Gain inspiration for your next design as nationally known and celebrated Tovah Martin shares advice and ideas to deeply enhance the gardening experience for you and your clients. Tovah explores the garden on all levels by attuning your nose to the scents and training your ears to listen. Learn to garden with eyes wide open, ears to the ground, and hands outstretched as Tovah leads us on an odyssey of exploration to awaken the senses and arouse our abilities of perception on all levels.

Ellen Sousa – Savor the Fragrance and Feast on the Bounty

The sense of smell merges delightful sensory experience with lasting associative memory. It is easy to incorporate fragrances into a garden through blooms or aromatic foliage. Ellen will discuss how and when plants release their fragrance, provide placement suggestions for greatest impact, and share design tips for overlooked plants that offer floral, spicy, and fresh fragrances. But it is not just about the aroma. As we catch the scent of ripening fruit, the taste-buds begin tingle with anticipation of mouth-watering edibles. Ellen will inspire us with design options that satisfy the sense of taste from vegetables, herbs, and spices to fruits, nuts, edible flowers, and more.

Trevor Smith – Tap into Your Inner Child

Children touch everything to fully engage with their surroundings, a well-planned sensory garden invites visitors of all ages to experience this enjoyable sensation. In the sensory garden there are many textural options to invite interaction. Trevor encourages designers to incorporate plants featuring smooth, rough, waxy, hairy, silky, spiny, and even sticky elements and shares some favorite plant options. Of all of the senses, incorporating sound is where Trevor’s designs excel. Sound elements in the garden create a sense of calm and serenity. There are several ways to incorporate sounds by including: plants that rustle in the breeze; enhancing habitat features to invite wildlife bringing chirping, buzzing, and birdsong; adding man-made features such as wind chimes; or integrating a water feature to provide the most soothing of sound of moving water. Trevor will share ideas and address questions as we channel our inner child in the sensory garden.

After lunch, all of the Summit speakers will join in a lively panel discussion. Panelists will answer questions to help address some challenges posed by sensory gardens. And regardless of a landscape’s design theme, there is a checklist of strategies at the core of any successful, ecological landscape. Panelists will discuss issues and provide tips for putting these principles and practices to work in any landscape.

The day long event will take place at the Community Harvest Project Barn, 37 Wheeler Road in North Grafton, and is $119 – $129. Visit www.ecolandscaping.org for registration and complete information.

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Thursday, November 1, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – Winter Branchlet Identification Webinar

This New England Wild Flower Society webinar on November 1 from 1 – 2 details the features needed to identify trees, shrubs, and vines during the dormant season, when most have shed their leaves. Using examples from the New England landscape, Arthur Haines’s presentation focuses on terminology to prepare students for using various guides to winter branchlet identification. $10 for NEWFS members, $13 for nonmembers. Register at www.newenglandwild.org.

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