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History of Early American Landscape Design

Difference between revisions of "Bed"

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==History==
 
==History==
  
Definitions of bed, ranging from Ephraim  
+
Definitions of bed, ranging from Ephraim Chambers’ Cyclopaedia entry of 1741 to George William Johnson’s discussion of 1847, indicate that the word generally referred to, as the latter wrote, “the site on which any cultivated plants are grown.” As spaces for growing plants, beds were the basic building blocks of most kitchen and flower gardens, as well as parterres (see Flower garden, Kitchen garden, and Parterre).  
Chambers’ Cyclopaedia entry of 1741 to  
 
George William Johnson’s discussion of 1847,  
 
indicate that the word generally referred to,  
 
as the latter wrote, “the site on which any  
 
cultivated plants are grown.” As spaces for  
 
growing plants, beds were the basic building  
 
blocks of most kitchen and flower gardens,  
 
as well as parterres (see Flower garden,  
 
Kitchen garden, and Parterre).  
 
  
As seventeenth-, eighteenth-, and  
+
As seventeenth-, eighteenth-, and nineteenth-century treatises and dictionaries explain, beds could be raised above the surface of the ground through the addition of  
nineteenth-century treatises and dictionaries  
+
extra soil or manure to distinguish them from surrounding walkways or turf and to allow better drainage and ease of maintenance. Edgings of organic or inorganic materials also helped to shore up the raised surface as well as to establish the bed’s outline.  
explain, beds could be raised above the surface  
 
of the ground through the addition of  
 
extra soil or manure to distinguish them from  
 
surrounding walkways or turf and to allow  
 
better drainage and ease of maintenance.  
 
Edgings of organic or inorganic materials also  
 
helped to shore up the raised surface as well  
 
as to establish the bed’s outline.  
 
  
Treatise writers distinguished between  
+
Treatise writers distinguished between different types of beds, each with a specific function, composition, and placement—such as hot bed, cold bed, kitchen bed, nursery bed, or flower bed.1 The form and techniques of making specialized utilitarian beds, such as hot beds, changed little over the centuries. Oblong and rectangular forms were favored for utilitarian beds because such shapes allowed easy maintenance— especially when intersected by walkways. They were well suited to the general practice of subdividing kitchen gardens into squares or rectangles [Fig. 1]. In contrast, the shape and arrangement of ornamental flower beds changed dramatically between 1700 and 1850 [Fig. 2].  
different types of beds, each with a specific  
 
function, composition, and placement—such  
 
as hot bed, cold bed, kitchen bed, nursery  
 
bed, or flower bed.1 The form and techniques  
 
of making specialized utilitarian  
 
beds, such as hot beds, changed little over  
 
the centuries. Oblong and rectangular forms  
 
were favored for utilitarian beds because  
 
such shapes allowed easy maintenance—  
 
especially when intersected by walkways.  
 
They were well suited to the general practice  
 
of subdividing kitchen gardens into  
 
squares or rectangles [Fig. 1]. In contrast, the  
 
shape and arrangement of ornamental  
 
flower beds changed dramatically between  
 
1700 and 1850 [Fig. 2].  
 
  
At the end of the eighteenth century,  
+
At the end of the eighteenth century, treatise writers such as Charles Marshall and Bernard M’Mahon dismissed the ancient style of flower gardens and its predilection for beds shaped in imitation of scroll work or embroidery (see Ancient style). They advocated oblong or square beds framed with boards and separated by walks or alleys. David Huebner’s watercolor of 1818, House with Six-Bed Garden, is a stylized representation of the rectangular form of bed described by these two authors [Fig. 3].  
treatise writers such as Charles Marshall and  
 
Bernard M’Mahon dismissed the ancient  
 
style of flower gardens and its predilection  
 
for beds shaped in imitation of scroll work or  
 
embroidery (see Ancient style). They advocated  
 
oblong or square beds framed with  
 
boards and separated by walks or alleys.  
 
David Huebner’s watercolor of 1818, House  
 
with Six-Bed Garden, is a stylized representation  
 
of the rectangular form of bed  
 
described by these two authors [Fig. 3].  
 
  
In addition to specifying the form of  
+
In addition to specifying the form of beds, M’Mahon (1806) also provided specific instructions for the arrangement of flowers within beds, separating bulbous from herbaceous plants for ease of maintenance. (This tradition of separating flowers into individual beds can be traced back to at least the eighteenth century, when British florists advocated such planting practices.) M’Mahon did, however, allow for mixing species in order to ensure continuous blooms. Evidence indicates that separating plant types by bed was practiced in nineteenth-century America, as at Monticello.  
beds, M’Mahon (1806) also provided specific  
 
instructions for the arrangement of flowers  
 
within beds, separating bulbous from herbaceous  
 
plants for ease of maintenance. (This tradition of separating flowers into individual  
 
beds can be traced back to at least the  
 
eighteenth century, when British florists  
 
advocated such planting practices.) M’Mahon  
 
did, however, allow for mixing species in  
 
order to ensure continuous blooms. Evidence  
 
indicates that separating plant types by bed  
 
was practiced in nineteenth-century America,  
 
as at Monticello.  
 
  
During the second half of the eighteenth  
+
During the second half of the eighteenth century, another pronounced shift in flower bed design developed in England, from geometric rectilinear beds to circular or irregular oval (or kidney-shaped) beds. The latter beds were sometimes planted in concentric circles with plants arranged according to height, from lowest at the edges to highest at the center of the bed.2 These practices, adopted in America, are well documented at Jefferson’s plantation, which vividly illustrates the growing preference for oval or curved beds. Jefferson originally proposed rectangular beds to be encompassed by twin pavilions [Fig. 4], but eventually he built oval beds [Fig. 5]. This oval shape was repeated in the beds located along the serpentine walk extending from the pavilion arms. While it is not known how the plants were arranged within these outlying beds, Jefferson noted that oval beds permitted him a greater variety of flowers, as compared to his strict arrangement by species in the beds nearest the house. Monticello also demonstrates how beds might be interspersed throughout the grounds, particularly along walkways, underneath windows, or outside doorways.  
century, another pronounced shift in flower  
 
bed design developed in England, from geometric  
 
rectilinear beds to circular or irregular  
 
oval (or kidney-shaped) beds. The latter  
 
beds were sometimes planted in concentric  
 
circles with plants arranged according to  
 
height, from lowest at the edges to highest  
 
at the center of the bed.2 These practices,  
 
adopted in America, are well documented at  
 
Jefferson’s plantation, which vividly illustrates  
 
the growing preference for oval or  
 
curved beds. Jefferson originally proposed  
 
rectangular beds to be encompassed by twin  
 
pavilions [Fig. 4], but eventually he built oval  
 
beds [Fig. 5]. This oval shape was repeated  
 
in the beds located along the serpentine  
 
walk extending from the pavilion arms.  
 
While it is not known how the plants were  
 
arranged within these outlying beds, Jefferson  
 
noted that oval beds permitted him a  
 
greater variety of flowers, as compared to  
 
his strict arrangement by species in the beds  
 
nearest the house. Monticello also demonstrates  
 
how beds might be interspersed  
 
throughout the grounds, particularly along  
 
walkways, underneath windows, or outside  
 
doorways.  
 
  
The accounts of treatise writers and  
+
The accounts of treatise writers and observers of the American landscape confirm that circular or oval beds became the fashion in the first half of the nineteenth century [Fig. 6]. In the May 1835 issue of Horticultural Register, James E. Teschemacher proposed situating oval beds, filled with herbaceous flowers arranged in graduated rows, in front of the house. Like Jefferson, Teschemacher also envisioned punctuating walks with beds tucked along the curves of the walk and set into the turfed lawn. In 1840, C. M. Hovey declared that circular beds set in the front lawn was the new mode, an observation attested to by such sites as the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., and the Hudson River estates of Montgomery Place and Highland Place.
observers of the American landscape confirm  
 
that circular or oval beds became the  
 
fashion in the first half of the nineteenth  
 
century [Fig. 6]. In the May 1835 issue of Horticultural  
 
Register, James E. Teschemacher  
 
proposed situating oval beds, filled with  
 
herbaceous flowers arranged in graduated  
 
rows, in front of the house. Like Jefferson,  
 
Teschemacher also envisioned punctuating  
 
walks with beds tucked along the curves of  
 
the walk and set into the turfed lawn. In  
 
1840, C. M. Hovey declared that circular  
 
beds set in the front lawn was the new  
 
mode, an observation attested to by such  
 
sites as the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.,  
 
and the Hudson River estates of Montgomery  
 
Place and Highland Place.
 
  
While the pseudonymous Londoniensis,  
+
While the pseudonymous Londoniensis, writing in October 1850 in the Magazine of Horticulture, insisted that circular beds were universally adopted in the United States, alternate forms of bed designs also proliferated. The Magazine of Horticulture, in February 1840, for example, proposed that beds be arranged in knot patterns for a flower garden featuring annuals; it also described A. J. Downing’s employment of “arabesque” beds set into the lawn of his garden, as well as circular and irregular oval-shaped beds.
writing in October 1850 in the Magazine of  
 
Horticulture, insisted that circular beds were  
 
universally adopted in the United States,  
 
alternate forms of bed designs also proliferated.  
 
The Magazine of Horticulture, in February  
 
1840, for example, proposed that beds  
 
be arranged in knot patterns for a flower  
 
garden featuring annuals; it also described  
 
  
A. J. Downing’s employment of “arabesque”
+
In his 1849 treatise on landscape gardening, Downing provided a cogent explanation for the proliferation of different forms of bed designs at mid-century. He argued that different styles of gardens required different forms of beds. The architectural garden employed beds in the shape of circles, octagons, and squares, set off by edgings of permanent or semi-permanent material; the irregular garden featured beds “varied in outline” cut into the turf; the French garden relied on beds executed in “embroidery” designs and separated by grass or gravel walks; and the English flower garden utilized patterned beds of “irregular curved designs” (also known as arabesques) cut into the turf. Each corresponding style of garden and bed required different types of plants; for example, the French or embroidery garden employed “low-growing” herbaceous plants that allowed the design to be rendered distinctly. Moreover, each style was suited for a particular location. For example, the irregular
beds set into the lawn of his garden, as well
+
garden was ideal for picturesque or rustic settings distant from the house, while the architectural garden was intended to be placed near the house, where it could be viewed from the windows.
as circular and irregular oval-shaped beds.
 
In his 1849 treatise on landscape gardening,  
 
Downing provided a cogent explanation  
 
for the proliferation of different forms of  
 
bed designs at mid-century. He argued that  
 
different styles of gardens required different  
 
forms of beds. The architectural garden  
 
employed beds in the shape of circles,  
 
octagons, and squares, set off by edgings of  
 
permanent or semi-permanent material; the  
 
irregular garden featured beds “varied in  
 
outline” cut into the turf; the French garden  
 
relied on beds executed in “embroidery”  
 
designs and separated by grass or gravel  
 
walks; and the English flower garden utilized  
 
patterned beds of “irregular curved designs”  
 
(also known as arabesques) cut into the turf.  
 
Each corresponding style of garden and bed  
 
required different types of plants; for example,  
 
the French or embroidery garden  
 
employed “low-growing” herbaceous plants  
 
that allowed the design to be rendered distinctly.  
 
Moreover, each style was suited for a  
 
  
particular location. For example, the irregular
+
Closely related to the issue of the shape of beds was that of how the feature might be edged. Treatise writers, from around 1700 to 1850, debated repeatedly whether beds should be edged with semi-permanent materials, such as boards and tile, or living materials, such as boxwood (see Edging). In general, the aim was to achieve the appearance of neatness, no matter what the shape, style, or planting arrangement of the bed. While questions of form, technique, and style of beds preoccupied the design profession, the social significance of flower beds was also considered. At least two treatise writers, Teschemacher (1835) and Walter Elder (1849), explicitly linked flower beds to women. Teschemacher recommended that women, probably from middle or upper classes, should supervise the arrangement of plants by color because of their presumed training in domestic arts and decoration. Elder, however, suggested that women were best suited to the task of weeding flower beds, similarly linking femininity and domestic order.  
garden was ideal for picturesque or rustic
 
settings distant from the house, while the
 
architectural garden was intended to be
 
placed near the house, where it could be
 
viewed from the windows.
 
 
 
Closely related to the issue of the shape  
 
of beds was that of how the feature might  
 
be edged. Treatise writers, from around  
 
1700 to 1850, debated repeatedly whether  
 
beds should be edged with semi-permanent  
 
materials, such as boards and tile, or living  
 
materials, such as boxwood (see Edging). In
 
 
 
general, the aim was to achieve the appearance of neatness, no matter what the shape, style, or planting arrangement of the bed. While questions of form, technique, and style of beds preoccupied the design profession, the social significance of flower beds was also considered. At least two treatise writers, Teschemacher (1835) and Walter Elder (1849), explicitly linked flower beds to women. Teschemacher recommended that women, probably from middle or upper classes, should supervise the arrangement of plants by color because of their presumed training in domestic arts and decoration. Elder, however, suggested that women were  
 
best suited to the task of weeding flower  
 
beds, similarly linking femininity and  
 
domestic order.  
 
 
 
ALH
 
  
 +
-- ''Anne L. Helmreich''
  
 
==Texts==
 
==Texts==

Revision as of 20:46, December 16, 2015

History

Definitions of bed, ranging from Ephraim Chambers’ Cyclopaedia entry of 1741 to George William Johnson’s discussion of 1847, indicate that the word generally referred to, as the latter wrote, “the site on which any cultivated plants are grown.” As spaces for growing plants, beds were the basic building blocks of most kitchen and flower gardens, as well as parterres (see Flower garden, Kitchen garden, and Parterre).

As seventeenth-, eighteenth-, and nineteenth-century treatises and dictionaries explain, beds could be raised above the surface of the ground through the addition of extra soil or manure to distinguish them from surrounding walkways or turf and to allow better drainage and ease of maintenance. Edgings of organic or inorganic materials also helped to shore up the raised surface as well as to establish the bed’s outline.

Treatise writers distinguished between different types of beds, each with a specific function, composition, and placement—such as hot bed, cold bed, kitchen bed, nursery bed, or flower bed.1 The form and techniques of making specialized utilitarian beds, such as hot beds, changed little over the centuries. Oblong and rectangular forms were favored for utilitarian beds because such shapes allowed easy maintenance— especially when intersected by walkways. They were well suited to the general practice of subdividing kitchen gardens into squares or rectangles [Fig. 1]. In contrast, the shape and arrangement of ornamental flower beds changed dramatically between 1700 and 1850 [Fig. 2].

At the end of the eighteenth century, treatise writers such as Charles Marshall and Bernard M’Mahon dismissed the ancient style of flower gardens and its predilection for beds shaped in imitation of scroll work or embroidery (see Ancient style). They advocated oblong or square beds framed with boards and separated by walks or alleys. David Huebner’s watercolor of 1818, House with Six-Bed Garden, is a stylized representation of the rectangular form of bed described by these two authors [Fig. 3].

In addition to specifying the form of beds, M’Mahon (1806) also provided specific instructions for the arrangement of flowers within beds, separating bulbous from herbaceous plants for ease of maintenance. (This tradition of separating flowers into individual beds can be traced back to at least the eighteenth century, when British florists advocated such planting practices.) M’Mahon did, however, allow for mixing species in order to ensure continuous blooms. Evidence indicates that separating plant types by bed was practiced in nineteenth-century America, as at Monticello.

During the second half of the eighteenth century, another pronounced shift in flower bed design developed in England, from geometric rectilinear beds to circular or irregular oval (or kidney-shaped) beds. The latter beds were sometimes planted in concentric circles with plants arranged according to height, from lowest at the edges to highest at the center of the bed.2 These practices, adopted in America, are well documented at Jefferson’s plantation, which vividly illustrates the growing preference for oval or curved beds. Jefferson originally proposed rectangular beds to be encompassed by twin pavilions [Fig. 4], but eventually he built oval beds [Fig. 5]. This oval shape was repeated in the beds located along the serpentine walk extending from the pavilion arms. While it is not known how the plants were arranged within these outlying beds, Jefferson noted that oval beds permitted him a greater variety of flowers, as compared to his strict arrangement by species in the beds nearest the house. Monticello also demonstrates how beds might be interspersed throughout the grounds, particularly along walkways, underneath windows, or outside doorways.

The accounts of treatise writers and observers of the American landscape confirm that circular or oval beds became the fashion in the first half of the nineteenth century [Fig. 6]. In the May 1835 issue of Horticultural Register, James E. Teschemacher proposed situating oval beds, filled with herbaceous flowers arranged in graduated rows, in front of the house. Like Jefferson, Teschemacher also envisioned punctuating walks with beds tucked along the curves of the walk and set into the turfed lawn. In 1840, C. M. Hovey declared that circular beds set in the front lawn was the new mode, an observation attested to by such sites as the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., and the Hudson River estates of Montgomery Place and Highland Place.

While the pseudonymous Londoniensis, writing in October 1850 in the Magazine of Horticulture, insisted that circular beds were universally adopted in the United States, alternate forms of bed designs also proliferated. The Magazine of Horticulture, in February 1840, for example, proposed that beds be arranged in knot patterns for a flower garden featuring annuals; it also described A. J. Downing’s employment of “arabesque” beds set into the lawn of his garden, as well as circular and irregular oval-shaped beds.

In his 1849 treatise on landscape gardening, Downing provided a cogent explanation for the proliferation of different forms of bed designs at mid-century. He argued that different styles of gardens required different forms of beds. The architectural garden employed beds in the shape of circles, octagons, and squares, set off by edgings of permanent or semi-permanent material; the irregular garden featured beds “varied in outline” cut into the turf; the French garden relied on beds executed in “embroidery” designs and separated by grass or gravel walks; and the English flower garden utilized patterned beds of “irregular curved designs” (also known as arabesques) cut into the turf. Each corresponding style of garden and bed required different types of plants; for example, the French or embroidery garden employed “low-growing” herbaceous plants that allowed the design to be rendered distinctly. Moreover, each style was suited for a particular location. For example, the irregular garden was ideal for picturesque or rustic settings distant from the house, while the architectural garden was intended to be placed near the house, where it could be viewed from the windows.

Closely related to the issue of the shape of beds was that of how the feature might be edged. Treatise writers, from around 1700 to 1850, debated repeatedly whether beds should be edged with semi-permanent materials, such as boards and tile, or living materials, such as boxwood (see Edging). In general, the aim was to achieve the appearance of neatness, no matter what the shape, style, or planting arrangement of the bed. While questions of form, technique, and style of beds preoccupied the design profession, the social significance of flower beds was also considered. At least two treatise writers, Teschemacher (1835) and Walter Elder (1849), explicitly linked flower beds to women. Teschemacher recommended that women, probably from middle or upper classes, should supervise the arrangement of plants by color because of their presumed training in domestic arts and decoration. Elder, however, suggested that women were best suited to the task of weeding flower beds, similarly linking femininity and domestic order.

-- Anne L. Helmreich

Texts

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Notes

Retrieved from "https://heald.nga.gov/mediawiki/index.php?title=Bed&oldid=16391"

History of Early American Landscape Design contributors, "Bed," History of Early American Landscape Design, , https://heald.nga.gov/mediawiki/index.php?title=Bed&oldid=16391 (accessed November 24, 2024).

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