Difference between revisions of "Wilderness"
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==History== | ==History== | ||
+ | |||
+ | When used in the context of seventeenth- | ||
+ | and eighteenth-century gardens, the term | ||
+ | wilderness generally referred to a planned | ||
+ | arrangement of trees that contained an | ||
+ | understory of vegetation, often set within a | ||
+ | regularly defined space [Fig. 1].1 According | ||
+ | to Batty Langley (1728), usually this feature | ||
+ | was located in a remote region of the garden. | ||
+ | Philip Miller, in his 1754 treatise, | ||
+ | insisted that wildernesses be located some | ||
+ | distance from the house, so that moisture | ||
+ | from the trees would not harm the dwelling. | ||
+ | He also believed that the feature should not | ||
+ | “obstruct any distant Prospect of the Country” | ||
+ | and recommended that it be developed | ||
+ | on a scale proportionate with the rest of the | ||
+ | garden. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Elaborately patterned walks helped | ||
+ | establish the internal design of the wilderness | ||
+ | and encouraged strolling. These walks, | ||
+ | typically framed by vegetation, could range | ||
+ | from rectilinear to serpentine, as Langley’s | ||
+ | designs demonstrate. Miller maintained that | ||
+ | wilderness walks should meander and contain | ||
+ | quick turns to surprise the visitor with | ||
+ | hidden features. In The Gardeners Dictionary | ||
+ | |||
+ | (1754), American plants were listed under | ||
+ | the category “wilderness,” a garden type | ||
+ | that Miller recommended be laid out with | ||
+ | serpentine walkways as if re-creating the | ||
+ | untamed environment in which the plants | ||
+ | were found originally.2 | ||
+ | |||
+ | In the seventeenth and early eighteenth | ||
+ | centuries, wilderness walks were typically | ||
+ | bordered by dense, high hedges, as suggested | ||
+ | by Richard Bradley (1719). Increasingly, | ||
+ | these hedges were either trimmed to a | ||
+ | low height or removed altogether in favor of | ||
+ | shrubs underplanted with flowers. This shift | ||
+ | in taste is indicated by Miller’s treatise, in | ||
+ | which he criticized high hedges and recommended | ||
+ | lining the walks of the wilderness | ||
+ | with irregularly disposed “Wood-flowers” | ||
+ | (such as violets and daffodils), backed by | ||
+ | low flowering shrubs (such as roses and | ||
+ | honeysuckles). This method created a graduated | ||
+ | slope of shrubs culminating in the | ||
+ | grouping of trees. Eventually, this manner of | ||
+ | arranging a wilderness became more commonly | ||
+ | known as shrubbery in horticultural | ||
+ | manuals (see Shrubbery).3 | ||
+ | |||
+ | The emergence of such shrubbery, however, | ||
+ | did not mean the immediate demise of | ||
+ | the wilderness, nor did it mean that the new | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | use of the term “shrubbery” correlated precisely | ||
+ | with the old.4 Shrubberies were typically | ||
+ | characterized by decorative plantings | ||
+ | arranged with respect to height in graduated | ||
+ | slopes, and it is clear from Miller’s account | ||
+ | that wildernesses could be similarly | ||
+ | arranged. Nonetheless, some differences distinguish | ||
+ | the two features. Most significantly, | ||
+ | a wilderness (unlike a shrubbery) was often | ||
+ | arranged in geometrical fashion, with regu | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | larized plantings punctuated by a centrally | ||
+ | placed decorative object, such as a fountain | ||
+ | or statue. The illusion of density in wilderness | ||
+ | vegetation often was created by planting | ||
+ | trees in a quincunx pattern (resembling the | ||
+ | arrangement of a five-face on a die), a plan | ||
+ | not generally used in shrubberies. | ||
+ | |||
+ | A few colonial wildernesses were constructed | ||
+ | in a manner roughly comparable to | ||
+ | that described by Miller and Langley.5 A 1734 | ||
+ | real estate advertisement for a South Carolina | ||
+ | island, for example, noted a shady | ||
+ | wilderness filled with walks and arbors. John | ||
+ | Penn and George Washington each built a | ||
+ | wilderness on his estate, placing the feature | ||
+ | at a distance from the main house, in keeping | ||
+ | with Langley’s prescriptions. In John Nancarrow’s | ||
+ | c. 1784 plan of John Penn’s estate in | ||
+ | Philadelphia, the wilderness is labeled at “c” | ||
+ | [Fig. 2]. In his plan for Mount Vernon [Fig. 3], | ||
+ | Samuel Vaughan in 1787 depicted wildernesses | ||
+ | flanking the serpentine walks and | ||
+ | eventually merging at some distance from | ||
+ | the main house. In practice, Washington did | ||
+ | not follow Vaughan’s recommendation but | ||
+ | kept the area clear to form a view framed by | ||
+ | wildernesses, as his contemporaries Langley | ||
+ | and Miller recommended. According to | ||
+ | Washington’s diaries, the wildernesses at | ||
+ | Mount Vernon were also intersected with | ||
+ | walks, although such details are not noted on | ||
+ | Vaughan’s plan of the estate. In keeping with | ||
+ | the elision between the terms “wilderness” | ||
+ | and “shrubbery” in this period, Washington | ||
+ | sometimes referred to these planting features | ||
+ | as shrubberies. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The term “wilderness” persisted in early | ||
+ | nineteenth-century American horticultural | ||
+ | manuals. Bernard M’Mahon (1806), for | ||
+ | example, emphasized winding walks framed | ||
+ | by closely planted vegetation and occasionally | ||
+ | leading to open spaces also bounded by | ||
+ | plantations. By this date, however, the term | ||
+ | already was waning in importance. The | ||
+ | Encyclopaedia (1798) denounced the “stars | ||
+ | and other ridiculous figures” that sometimes | ||
+ | appeared in wilderness plans. When Noah | ||
+ | Webster defined wilderness in his 1828 dictionary, | ||
+ | the landscape definition term was | ||
+ | listed last and was explained only briefly as | ||
+ | “a wood in a garden, resembling a forest.” | ||
+ | When A. J. Downing in 1847 referred to “The | ||
+ | Wilderness” at Montgomery Place, in | ||
+ | Dutchess County, N.Y., he referred to the recreation | ||
+ | of a native woodland [Fig. 4] and | ||
+ | not to a feature consistent with discussions | ||
+ | found in earlier gardening treatises. Downing’s | ||
+ | evocative description of a “richly | ||
+ | wooded valley,” where one could imagine | ||
+ | oneself “in the depths of an old forest, far | ||
+ | away from the haunts of civilization,” | ||
+ | reflects a central trope in nineteenth- | ||
+ | century American culture, representing the | ||
+ | wilderness as a primeval forest. The later | ||
+ | definition shaped not only aesthetics but | ||
+ | also the nation’s sense of self-identity. Thus | ||
+ | the wilderness in American gardens evolved | ||
+ | from an artificially constructed space set | ||
+ | apart from the natural landscape to an | ||
+ | unimproved natural landscape included | ||
+ | within the conception of the garden. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ALH | ||
+ | |||
==Texts== | ==Texts== |
Revision as of 15:06, February 8, 2016
History
When used in the context of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century gardens, the term wilderness generally referred to a planned arrangement of trees that contained an understory of vegetation, often set within a regularly defined space [Fig. 1].1 According to Batty Langley (1728), usually this feature was located in a remote region of the garden. Philip Miller, in his 1754 treatise, insisted that wildernesses be located some distance from the house, so that moisture from the trees would not harm the dwelling. He also believed that the feature should not “obstruct any distant Prospect of the Country” and recommended that it be developed on a scale proportionate with the rest of the garden.
Elaborately patterned walks helped establish the internal design of the wilderness and encouraged strolling. These walks, typically framed by vegetation, could range from rectilinear to serpentine, as Langley’s designs demonstrate. Miller maintained that wilderness walks should meander and contain quick turns to surprise the visitor with hidden features. In The Gardeners Dictionary
(1754), American plants were listed under the category “wilderness,” a garden type that Miller recommended be laid out with serpentine walkways as if re-creating the untamed environment in which the plants were found originally.2
In the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, wilderness walks were typically bordered by dense, high hedges, as suggested by Richard Bradley (1719). Increasingly, these hedges were either trimmed to a low height or removed altogether in favor of shrubs underplanted with flowers. This shift in taste is indicated by Miller’s treatise, in which he criticized high hedges and recommended lining the walks of the wilderness with irregularly disposed “Wood-flowers” (such as violets and daffodils), backed by low flowering shrubs (such as roses and honeysuckles). This method created a graduated slope of shrubs culminating in the grouping of trees. Eventually, this manner of arranging a wilderness became more commonly known as shrubbery in horticultural manuals (see Shrubbery).3
The emergence of such shrubbery, however, did not mean the immediate demise of the wilderness, nor did it mean that the new
use of the term “shrubbery” correlated precisely
with the old.4 Shrubberies were typically
characterized by decorative plantings
arranged with respect to height in graduated
slopes, and it is clear from Miller’s account
that wildernesses could be similarly
arranged. Nonetheless, some differences distinguish
the two features. Most significantly,
a wilderness (unlike a shrubbery) was often
arranged in geometrical fashion, with regu
larized plantings punctuated by a centrally
placed decorative object, such as a fountain
or statue. The illusion of density in wilderness
vegetation often was created by planting
trees in a quincunx pattern (resembling the
arrangement of a five-face on a die), a plan
not generally used in shrubberies.
A few colonial wildernesses were constructed in a manner roughly comparable to that described by Miller and Langley.5 A 1734 real estate advertisement for a South Carolina island, for example, noted a shady wilderness filled with walks and arbors. John Penn and George Washington each built a wilderness on his estate, placing the feature at a distance from the main house, in keeping with Langley’s prescriptions. In John Nancarrow’s c. 1784 plan of John Penn’s estate in Philadelphia, the wilderness is labeled at “c” [Fig. 2]. In his plan for Mount Vernon [Fig. 3], Samuel Vaughan in 1787 depicted wildernesses flanking the serpentine walks and eventually merging at some distance from the main house. In practice, Washington did not follow Vaughan’s recommendation but kept the area clear to form a view framed by wildernesses, as his contemporaries Langley and Miller recommended. According to Washington’s diaries, the wildernesses at Mount Vernon were also intersected with walks, although such details are not noted on Vaughan’s plan of the estate. In keeping with the elision between the terms “wilderness” and “shrubbery” in this period, Washington sometimes referred to these planting features as shrubberies.
The term “wilderness” persisted in early nineteenth-century American horticultural manuals. Bernard M’Mahon (1806), for example, emphasized winding walks framed by closely planted vegetation and occasionally leading to open spaces also bounded by plantations. By this date, however, the term already was waning in importance. The Encyclopaedia (1798) denounced the “stars and other ridiculous figures” that sometimes appeared in wilderness plans. When Noah Webster defined wilderness in his 1828 dictionary, the landscape definition term was listed last and was explained only briefly as “a wood in a garden, resembling a forest.” When A. J. Downing in 1847 referred to “The Wilderness” at Montgomery Place, in Dutchess County, N.Y., he referred to the recreation of a native woodland [Fig. 4] and not to a feature consistent with discussions found in earlier gardening treatises. Downing’s evocative description of a “richly wooded valley,” where one could imagine oneself “in the depths of an old forest, far away from the haunts of civilization,” reflects a central trope in nineteenth- century American culture, representing the wilderness as a primeval forest. The later definition shaped not only aesthetics but
also the nation’s sense of self-identity. Thus
the wilderness in American gardens evolved from an artificially constructed space set apart from the natural landscape to an unimproved natural landscape included within the conception of the garden.
ALH