Tag: Margie Ruddick

  • Thursday, October 20, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Wild By Design

    Can nature—in all its unruly wildness—be an integral part of creative landscape design? With beautiful images, award-winning designer Margie Ruddick urges us to look beyond the rules often imposed by both landscaping convention and sustainability checklists. Instead, she offers a set of principles for a more creative and intuitive approach that challenges the entrenched belief that natural processes cannot complement high-level landscape design.

    On Thursday, October 20 at 7 pm in the Weld Hill Research Building, 1300 Centre Street in Roslindale, Ruddick will explain the five fundamental strategies she employs, often in combination, to give life, beauty, and meaning to landscapes. Drawing on her own projects—from New York City’s Queens Plaza, formerly a concrete jungle of traffic, to a desertscape backyard in Baja, California, to the Living Water Park in Chengdu, China—she offers guidance on creating beautiful, healthy landscapes that successfully reconnect people with larger natural systems. Ruddick stretches the boundaries of landscape design, offering a set of broader, more flexible strategies and practical examples that allow for the unexpected exuberance of nature to be a welcome part of our gardens, parks, backyards, and cities.

    Fee: Free Arboretum members and students; $10 nonmember. Register at my.arboretum.harvard.edu or call 617-384-5277.

  • Thursday, February 11, 7:00 pm – Margie Ruddick

    Hear Margie Ruddick on Thursday, February 11, at 7 pm as part of the Gardner Museum Landscape Lectures 2015-16. Over the last 25 years, Margie Ruddick has gained recognition for her pioneering, environmental approach to landscape design, forging a design language that integrates ecology, urban planning, and culture. Ruddick’s completed international projects include Shillim Institute and Retreat in the Western Ghats of India (pictured below) and the Living Water Park, with artist Betsy Damon, in Chengdu, China. This was among the first ecological parks in China, cleaning polluted river water biologically. In the U.S., she is known for transforming Queens Plaza in New York City, a design which has won many awards for promoting ideas of nature in the city. Landscape Lectures begin at 7 pm in Calderwood Hall at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Lectures include Museum admission and require a ticket; tickets can be reserved online at www.gardnermuseum.org, in person at the door, or by phone: 617 278 5156. Museum admission: adults $15, seniors $12, students $5, free for Museum members.  Image from www.dwell.com.