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History of Early American Landscape Design

Difference between revisions of "Geometric style"

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===Citations===
 
===Citations===
  
Loudon, J. C., 1826, An Encyclopaedia of Gardening  
+
* Loudon, J. C., 1826, An Encyclopaedia of Gardening (pp. 1005–6, 1020–21)  
(pp. 1005–6, 1020–21)  
 
  
“7205. In planting in the geometric  
+
: “7205. In planting in the geometric style, the first consideration is the nature of the whole or general design; and here, as in the ground, geometric forms will still prevail, and while the masses reflect forms from the house, or represent squares, triangles, or trapeziums, the more minute parts, characterised by lines rather than forms, such as avenues, rows, clumps, and stars, &c. are contained in parallelograms, squares, or circles. In regard to the parts, masses and avenues should extend from the house in all directions, so far as to diffuse around the character of design; and as much farther in particular directions as the nature of the surface admits of, the distant beauties suggest, and the character of the mansion requires. In disposing these masses, whether on a flat or irregular surface, regard will be had to leave uncovered such a quantity of lawn or turf as shall, at all events, admit a free circulation of air, give breadth of light, and display the form of the large masses of wood. Uniformity and variety as a whole, and use as well as beauty in the parts, must be kept constantly in view. Avenues, alleys, and vistas, should serve as much as possible as roads, walks, lines of fences, or screens of shelter or shade; but where this is not the case, they should point to some distant beauties, or near artificial objects, to be seen at or beyond their termination. The outer extremities of artificial plantations may either join natural woods, other artificial scenes, cultivated lands, or barren heaths or commons. . . .
style, the  
+
: “7262. The lawn, or that breadth of mown turf formed in front of, or extending in different directions from, the garden-front of the house, is, in the geometric style, varied by architectural forms, levels, and slopes; and in the modern by a picturesque or painter-like disposition of groups, placed so as to connect with the leading masses, and throw the lawn into an agreeable shape or shapes. In very small villas the lawn may embrace the garden or principal front of the house, without the intervention of terrace-scenery, and may be separated from the park, or park-like field, by a light wire fence; but in more extensive scenes it should embrace a terrace, or some avowedly artificial architectural basis to the mansion, and a sunk wall, as a distant separation, will be more dignified and permanent than any iron fence. The park may come close up to the terrace-garden, especially in a flat situation, or where the breadth of the terrace is considerable. . . .
first consideration is the nature of the whole or  
+
: “7265. The park. . . . In the geometric style, the more distant or concealed parts were subdivided into fields, surrounded by broad stripes or double rows, enclosed in walls or hedges, and the nearer parts were chiefly covered with wood, enclosing regular surfaces of pasturage.”
general design; and here, as in the ground, geometric  
 
forms will still prevail, and while the  
 
masses reflect forms from the house, or represent  
 
squares, triangles, or trapeziums, the more minute  
 
parts, characterised by lines rather than forms,  
 
such as avenues, rows, clumps, and stars, &c. are  
 
contained in parallelograms, squares, or circles. In  
 
regard to the parts, masses and avenues should  
 
extend from the house in all directions, so far as to  
 
diffuse around the character of design; and as  
 
much farther in particular directions as the nature  
 
of the surface admits of, the distant beauties suggest,  
 
and the character of the mansion requires. In  
 
disposing these masses, whether on a flat or irregular  
 
surface, regard will be had to leave uncovered  
 
such a quantity of lawn or turf as shall, at all  
 
events, admit a free circulation of air, give breadth  
 
of light, and display the form of the large masses  
 
of wood. Uniformity and variety as a whole, and  
 
use as well as beauty in the parts, must be kept  
 
  
constantly in view. Avenues, alleys, and vistas,
 
should serve as much as possible as roads, walks,
 
lines of fences, or screens of shelter or shade; but
 
where this is not the case, they should point to
 
some distant beauties, or near artificial objects, to
 
be seen at or beyond their termination. The outer
 
extremities of artificial plantations may either join
 
natural woods, other artificial scenes, cultivated
 
lands, or barren heaths or commons. . . .
 
  
“7262. The lawn, or that breadth of mown turf
+
* Anonymous, 1 April 1837, “Landscape Gardening” (Horticultural Register 3: 124)
formed in front of, or extending in different directions
 
from, the garden-front of the house, is, in
 
the geometric style, varied by architectural forms,
 
levels, and slopes; and in the modern by a picturesque
 
or painter-like disposition of groups, placed
 
so as to connect with the leading masses, and
 
throw the lawn into an agreeable shape or shapes.
 
In very small villas the lawn may embrace the garden
 
or principal front of the house, without the
 
intervention of terrace-scenery, and may be separated
 
from the park, or park-like field, by a light
 
wire fence; but in more extensive scenes it should
 
embrace a terrace, or some avowedly artificial
 
architectural basis to the mansion, and a sunk
 
wall, as a distant separation, will be more dignified
 
and permanent than any iron fence. The park may
 
come close up to the terrace-garden, especially in
 
a flat situation, or where the breadth of the terrace
 
is considerable. . . .
 
  
“7265. The park. . . . In the geometric style, the
+
: “The uniformity produced by straight walks and alleys bordered by regular rows of trees, another characteristic of the old or geometrical style, though pleasing at first, soon becomes tiresome.”  
more distant or concealed parts were subdivided
 
into fields, surrounded by broad stripes or double
 
rows, enclosed in walls or hedges, and the nearer
 
parts were chiefly covered with wood, enclosing
 
regular surfaces of pasturage.”  
 
  
Anonymous, 1 April 1837, “Landscape Gardening”
 
(Horticultural Register 3: 124)
 
  
“The uniformity produced by straight walks and
+
* Loudon, J. C., 1838, The Suburban Gardener (pp. 529–31)
alleys bordered by regular rows of trees, another
 
characteristic of the old or geometrical style,  
 
though pleasing at first, soon becomes tiresome.
 
  
Loudon, J. C., 1838, The Suburban Gardener
+
: “A Villa Residence of Two Acres, within a regular Boundary, laid out in the Geometrical Style.— The object in this case is to produce a splendid effect at a moderate expense of annual keeping, but with no regard to profit. The general form of the ground is that of a parallelogram, and its disposition is so clearly shown in the isometrical view. . . that it will require little or no description. The entrance is through a straight avenue to a flight of steps, which leads to a raised platform on which the house stands. To the right and left of the avenue are double rows of trees, which may be fruit-bearing kinds, such as the apple, pear, cherry, and plum. Beyond these, on each side, are two small kitchen-gardens, intended for gooseberries, strawberries, and other small fruits, and for pot-herbs, tart rhubarb, spinach, kidneybeans, and a few such vegetables as are desirable to have always at hand. The house and these kitchen-gardens occupy about half the entire residence.The other half is laid out in the form of a sunk flower-garden, consisting of a variety of curvilinear beds, bordered by a kerb of stone, and surrounded by turf. From the terrace walks there are four descents to this garden, each consisting of a double flight of steps. Each bed is supposed to be planted with one kind of herbaceous plant, so as to produce large masses of colour. The mode of selecting plants for this purpose, as well as lists of suitable plants, have been already given (p. 217 to p. 226), and further resources will be found in our catalogue. The sloping border between the sunk area and the flower-garden may either be planted with low evergreen shrubs, with roses kept low, or it may be in turf, or in rockwork: in the latter case, it may be covered with a collection of rock plants. Perhaps the most appropriate disposition of this sloping border would be to vary it with ornaments of box, on a ground of turf, so as to give it the appearance of an architectural moulding. In the centre there is a fountain. In situations where so much turf was not desirable, the walks between the beds might be of gravel or paved; but they will produce the best effect in turf.” [Fig. 6]
  
(pp. 529–31)
 
  
“A Villa Residence of Two Acres, within a regular
+
* W., M. A., February 1840, “On Flower Beds” (Magazine of Horticulture 6: 52)
Boundary, laid out in the Geometrical
 
Style.—
 
The object in this case is to produce a splendid
 
effect at a moderate expense of annual keeping,  
 
but with no regard to profit. The general form of
 
the ground is that of a parallelogram, and its disposition
 
is so clearly shown in the isometrical view
 
  
. . . that it will require little or no description. The
+
: “It is probably as difficult to fix upon the most suitable plant for the edging of a flower bed, as it is to determine the best shrub for a hedge around fields. For the borders of main avenues, or broad walks in grounds of considerable extent, box, as recommended, Vol. V., p. 350, is undoubtedly the best; but for small parterres, or the flower beds in a front door yard, it seems much less suitable. They can commonly be taken in at one glance of the eye, and notwithstanding all that has been said of the artificial or geometric style, it is the proper one for such places; for symmetry, or a perfect balance of corresponding parts, greatly strengthens the impression of such a scene, taken as a whole, or single mass of objects. The beds, therefore, will not only be small, but when there is the proper variety in the form of them, some, at least, must have quite acute angles. Box, if thrifty, (and, sickly, it would be an eyesore any where,) soon takes up too much space in breadth.
entrance is through a straight avenue to a flight of
 
steps, which leads to a raised platform on which
 
the house stands. To the right and left of the
 
avenue are double rows of trees, which may be
 
fruit-bearing kinds, such as the apple, pear,  
 
cherry, and plum. Beyond these, on each side, are
 
two small kitchen-gardens, intended for gooseberries,  
 
strawberries, and other small fruits, and for
 
pot-herbs, tart rhubarb, spinach, kidneybeans,  
 
and a few such vegetables as are desirable to have  
 
always at hand. The house and these kitchen-
 
gardens occupy about half the entire residence.
 
  
The other half is laid out in the form of a sunk
 
flower-garden, consisting of a variety of curvilinear
 
beds, bordered by a kerb of stone, and surrounded
 
by turf. From the terrace walks there are
 
four descents to this garden, each consisting of a
 
double flight of steps. Each bed is supposed to be
 
planted with one kind of herbaceous plant, so as
 
to produce large masses of colour. The mode of
 
selecting plants for this purpose, as well as lists of
 
suitable plants, have been already given (p. 217 to
 
  
p. 226), and further resources will be found in our
+
* Watterston, George, May 1844, “Landscape Gardening” (pp. 307–8, 310–11)  
catalogue. The sloping border between the sunk
 
area and the flower-garden may either be planted
 
with low evergreen shrubs, with roses kept low, or
 
it may be in turf, or in rockwork: in the latter case,
 
it may be covered with a collection of rock plants.
 
Perhaps the most appropriate disposition of this
 
sloping border would be to vary it with ornaments
 
of box, on a ground of turf, so as to give it the
 
appearance of an architectural moulding. In the
 
centre there is a fountain. In situations where so
 
much turf was not desirable, the walks between
 
the beds might be of gravel or paved; but they will
 
produce the best effect in turf.” [Fig. 6]
 
W., M. A., February 1840, “On Flower Beds”
 
(Magazine of Horticulture 6: 52)  
 
  
“It is probably as difficult to fix upon the most
+
: “The Dutch style, introduced by William III., and which prevailed in England for about fifty years was not much better, and was distinguished for sloped terraces formed of grass, land and water made into regular shapes by art, and adorned with trees in pots, or ‘planted alternately and clipped to preserve the most perfect regularity of shape’— and leisure, ‘in trim gardens, took his pleasure.’ ‘The compass and the square,’ says Walpole, ‘were of more use than the nurseryman. The measured walk, the quincunx and the étoile imposed their unsatisfying sameness on every royal and noble garden. Trees were headed and their sides pared away; many French groves seem green chests set upon poles. Seats of marble, arbors and summer houses terminated every vista, and symmetry, even when the space was too large to permit its being remarked at one view, was so essential, that, as Pope observed,  
suitable plant for the edging of a flower bed, as it
 
is to determine the best shrub for a hedge around
 
fields. For the borders of main avenues, or broad
 
walks in grounds of considerable extent, box, as
 
recommended, Vol. V., p. 350, is undoubtedly the
 
best; but for small parterres, or the flower beds in
 
a front door yard, it seems much less suitable.
 
They can commonly be taken in at one glance of
 
the eye, and notwithstanding all that has been said
 
of the artificial or geometric style, it is the proper
 
one for such places; for symmetry, or a perfect  
 
balance of corresponding parts, greatly strengthens
 
the impression of such a scene, taken as a
 
whole, or single mass of objects. The beds, therefore,
 
will not only be small, but when there is the  
 
proper variety in the form of them, some, at least,  
 
must have quite acute angles. Box, if thrifty, (and,
 
sickly, it would be an eyesore any where,) soon
 
takes up too much space in breadth.”
 
  
Watterston, George, May 1844, “Landscape
+
::‘Grove nods to grove, each alley has a brother
Gardening” (pp. 307–8, 310–11)
+
::And half the platform just reflects the other.
  
“The Dutch style, introduced by William III.,
+
:This formal, or geometric style was all the rage at the commencement of the 17th century in those parts of Europe where ornamental gardening prevailed, and the most distinguished artist of that age, if artist he could be called, was Le Notre....
and which prevailed in England for about fifty
+
: “In passing from the ancient, or geometric style, to the modern, or natural, the first improvers fell, perhaps, into an opposite extreme.
years was not much better, and was distinguished  
+
This is the danger in all sudden transitions. They seemed to conceive that crooked lines, serpentine windings and carelessness were true objects of beauty, and declared that nature abhorred a straight line; and thus fatigued the eye by incessant curves. They did not seem to be aware, that in her sublimest works nature prefers the straight line, as is shown in the apparent horizon of the ocean and the rays of the sun.”
for sloped terraces formed of grass, land and water
 
made into regular shapes by art, and adorned with
 
trees in pots, or ‘planted alternately and clipped to  
 
preserve the most perfect regularity of shape’—
 
and leisure, ‘in trim gardens, took his pleasure.’
 
‘The compass and the square,’ says Walpole, ‘were
 
of more use than the nurseryman. The measured
 
walk, the quincunx and the étoile imposed their
 
unsatisfying sameness on every royal and noble
 
garden. Trees were headed and their sides pared
 
away; many French groves seem green chests set
 
upon poles. Seats of marble, arbors and summer
 
  
houses terminated every vista, and symmetry,
 
even when the space was too large to permit its
 
being remarked at one view, was so essential, that,
 
as Pope observed,
 
  
‘Grove nods to grove, each alley has a brother
+
* Loudon, Jane, 1845, Gardening for Ladies (pp. 221–22)
And half the platform just reflects the other.
 
  
 +
: “GEOMETRIC GARDENS.—This style of gardening is that in which the shape of the ground, of the beds, of the walks, and even of the shrubs, is regular, or symmetrical; such as may be formed on paper by a rule and compass. The ground, if originally flat, is reduced to a general level surface, over which the beds, or borders, are distributed so as to form figures, either simply regular, such as squares and parallelograms, repeated one after another—or squares and parallelograms, and circles or ovals, or other curvilinear figures,—so arranged as to be symmetrical; that is to say, that one-half of the figure formed by the whole shall correspond with the other half. When the surface is naturally irregular or on a slope, it is thrown into different levels, which are joined by steep slopes called terraces, generally covered with turf, and ascended and descended by stone steps. Each of the levels is laid out either regularly or symmetrically, in the same manner as if the whole were only one bed; but the figures are of course smaller. Small trees or evergreen shrubs are distributed among the figures, and especially on each side of the main walks; and these trees or shrubs ought, in strict accordance with the style, to be cut or clipped into regular shapes; such as cones, pyramids, balls, candelabra, statues of men or animals, arcades, columns, or other architectural figures. In modern practice, this is generally neglected; but its omission is a defect, for cut trees are as essential to the geometric style, as having the ground cut or shaped into artificial surfaces.”
  
This formal, or geometric style was all the rage at
 
the commencement of the 17th century in those
 
parts of Europe where ornamental gardening prevailed,
 
and the most distinguished artist of that
 
age, if artist he could be called, was Le Notre....
 
  
“In passing from the ancient, or geometric
+
* Thomas, John J., April 1848, “The Shrubbery and Flower Garden” (The Cultivator 5: 114)
style, to the modern, or natural, the first
 
improvers fell, perhaps, into an opposite extreme.  
 
This is the danger in all sudden transitions. They
 
seemed to conceive that crooked lines, serpentine
 
windings and carelessness were true objects of
 
beauty, and declared that nature abhorred a
 
straight line; and thus fatigued the eye by incessant
 
curves. They did not seem to be aware, that in her
 
sublimest works nature prefers the straight line, as
 
is shown in the apparent horizon of the ocean and
 
the rays of the sun.”
 
  
Loudon, Jane, 1845, Gardening for Ladies
+
: “Nearly all the flower gardens of the country are laid out in geometrical lines; a style, it is true much better adapted to the small piece of ground allotted to flowers, than to the larger landscape garden composed of trees, lawns, and sheets of water. With a wish however, to encourage a more
 +
graceful, pleasing, and picturesque mode of laying out even the small flower garden in connexion with the shrubbery, we have given the above plan, which nearly explains itself.”
  
(pp. 221–22)
 
  
“GEOMETRIC GARDENS.—This style of gardening
+
* Downing, A. J., May 1848, “Design for a Small Flower Garden” (Horticulturist 2: 503)
is that in which the shape of the ground, of
 
the beds, of the walks, and even of the shrubs, is
 
regular, or symmetrical; such as may be formed
 
on paper by a rule and compass. The ground, if
 
originally flat, is reduced to a general level surface,
 
over which the beds, or borders, are distributed so
 
as to form figures, either simply regular, such as
 
squares and parallelograms, repeated one after
 
another—or squares and parallelograms, and circles
 
or ovals, or other curvilinear figures,—so
 
arranged as to be symmetrical; that is to say, that
 
one-half of the figure formed by the whole shall
 
correspond with the other half. When the surface
 
is naturally irregular or on a slope, it is thrown
 
into different levels, which are joined by steep
 
slopes called terraces, generally covered with turf,
 
and ascended and descended by stone steps. Each
 
of the levels is laid out either regularly or symmetrically,
 
in the same manner as if the whole were
 
only one bed; but the figures are of course smaller.
 
Small trees or evergreen shrubs are distributed
 
among the figures, and especially on each side of
 
the main walks; and these trees or shrubs ought, in
 
strict accordance with the style, to be cut or
 
clipped into regular shapes; such as cones, pyramids,
 
balls, candelabra, statues of men or animals,
 
arcades, columns, or other architectural figures. In
 
modern practice, this is generally neglected; but its
 
omission is a defect, for cut trees are as essential to
 
the geometric style, as having the ground cut or
 
shaped into artificial surfaces.”
 
  
Thomas, John J., April 1848, “The Shrubbery
+
: “The old geometric flower gardens, laid out with long beds, bordered with box, and separated by stiff gravel walks, are fast giving place to those more tasteful combinations of masses of gay, perpetual flowering plants, arranged upon turf, in the arabesque or English style.  
and Flower Garden” (The Cultivator 5: 114)  
+
: “In the former, you have a miscellaneous collection of plants, of all sizes and habits of growth, only a small part of which are seen in bloom at one time; while at almost all seasons naked stalks of plants, and bare dry soil borders, appear here and there, almost in spite of the best efforts of the gardener, to disfigure and mar the general elegance of the scene.
 +
: “In the latter, you have always the rich setting of the soft green turf, (which, of course mown once a fortnight, is short and velvet-like) and contrasting and enhanced in effect by this, are seen the beds of dwarfish plants, grown in masses, so as to give breadth and brilliancy of effect; these being composed only of plants almost perpetually in bloom, unite to form a floral picture, when well managed, as beautiful as the art of gardening will permit.”
  
“Nearly all the flower gardens of the country
 
are laid out in geometrical lines; a style, it is true
 
much better adapted to the small piece of ground
 
allotted to flowers, than to the larger landscape
 
garden composed of trees, lawns, and sheets of
 
  
water. With a wish however, to encourage a more
+
* Valk, Dr. William W., June 1848, “Design for a Geometric Flower Garden” (Horticulturist 2: 557–58)
graceful, pleasing, and picturesque mode of laying
 
out even the small flower garden in connexion
 
with the shrubbery, we have given the above plan,
 
which nearly explains itself.”
 
  
Downing, A. J., May 1848, “Design for a Small
+
: “I send you a plan for a geometrical flower garden. It was designed by Mr. Brown, gardener to the late Duke of Buckingham, and is a very pretty thing of the kind.
Flower Garden” (Horticulturist 2: 503)
+
: “When the nature of the ground will admit, the French parterre, or geometrical flower garden, is, above all others, the most to be recommended, for many situations, because it readily admits of the largest display of flowers throughout the season. There is scarcely any difficulty in producing a splendid show once or twice in the year, spring and autumn; and in consequence of many gentlemen not residing all the season near their flower gardens, the gardeners have an additional advantage in such places to produce, at the required time, the best display of flowers.” [Fig. 7]
  
“The old geometric flower gardens, laid out
 
with long beds, bordered with box, and separated
 
by stiff gravel walks, are fast giving place to those
 
more tasteful combinations of masses of gay, perpetual
 
flowering plants, arranged upon turf, in the
 
arabesque or English style.
 
  
“In the former, you have a miscellaneous collection
+
* Elder, Walter, 1849, The Cottage Garden of America (p. 26)
of plants, of all sizes and habits of growth,  
 
only a small part of which are seen in bloom at
 
one time; while at almost all seasons naked stalks
 
of plants, and bare dry soil borders, appear here
 
and there, almost in spite of the best efforts of the
 
gardener, to disfigure and mar the general elegance
 
of the scene.  
 
  
“In the latter, you have always the rich setting
+
: “If [the rich man’s lawn is constructed] in the geometrical style, the trees will stand in lines or figures; some cut into different shapes and forms, from a seat to a temple.”  
of the soft green turf, (which, of course mown
 
once a fortnight, is short and velvet-like) and contrasting
 
and enhanced in effect by this, are seen
 
the beds of dwarfish plants, grown in masses, so as
 
to give breadth and brilliancy of effect; these being
 
composed only of plants almost perpetually in
 
bloom, unite to form a floral picture, when well
 
managed, as beautiful as the art of gardening will
 
permit.”  
 
  
Valk, Dr. William W., June 1848, “Design for a
 
Geometric Flower Garden” (Horticulturist 2:
 
557–58)
 
  
“I send you a plan for a geometrical flower
+
* Ranlett, William H., 1849, The Architect ([1849] 1976: 4)
garden. It was designed by Mr. Brown, gardener to
 
the late Duke of Buckingham, and is a very pretty
 
thing of the kind.
 
  
“When the nature of the ground will admit,  
+
: “Landscape Gardening was, formerly, the imitation of geometric figures; hence the ancient mode of it is called the geometric style of gardening.”
the French parterre, or geometrical flower garden,
 
is, above all others, the most to be recommended,
 
for many situations, because it readily admits of  
 
the largest display of flowers throughout the season.
 
There is scarcely any difficulty in producing a
 
splendid show once or twice in the year, spring
 
and autumn; and in consequence of many gentlemen
 
not residing all the season near their flower
 
gardens, the gardeners have an additional advantage
 
in such places to produce, at the required
 
time, the best display of flowers.” [Fig. 7]
 
  
Elder, Walter, 1849, The Cottage Garden of
 
America (p. 26)
 
  
“If [the rich man’s lawn is constructed] in the
+
* Downing, A. J., 1849, A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening (pp. 21–22, 27, 91–93, 531)
geometrical style, the trees will stand in lines or
 
figures; some cut into different shapes and forms,  
 
from a seat to a temple.”
 
  
Ranlett, William H., 1849, The Architect ([1849]
+
: “All late authors agree in these two distinct and widely different modes of the art; 1st, the Ancient, Formal, or Geometric Style; 2d, the Modern, Natural, or Irregular Style.  
1976: 4)
+
: “THE ANCIENT STYLE. A predominance of regular forms and right lines is the characteristic feature of the ancient style of gardening. The value of art, of power, and of wealth, were at once easily and strongly shown by an artificial arrangement of all the materials; an arrangement the more striking, as it differed most widely from nature. And in an age when costly and stately architecture was most abundant, as in the times of the Roman empire, it is natural to suppose, that the symmetry and studied elegance of the palace, or the villa, would be transferred and continued in the surrounding gardens. ...  
 
+
: “Pliny’s garden, of which a pretty minute account remains,—filled with cypresses and bay trees, planted to form a coursing place or hippodrome, adorned with vis-à-vis figures of animals cut in box trees, and decorated with fountains and marble alcoves, shaded by vines—seems, indeed, to have been the true classical type of all the later efforts of modern continental nations in their geometric gardens. . . .  
“Landscape Gardening was, formerly, the imitation
+
: “It would appear to be an undeniable fact in the history of ornamental gardening that, from the time of William the Conqueror down to the latter part of the reign of Queen Anne, and the beginning of that of George I., nothing was considered garden scenery except [if] it was in the formal and geometric style....  
of geometric figures; hence the ancient mode
+
: “One of the favorite fancies of the geometric gardener was the Labyrinth . . . of which a few celebrated examples are still in existence in England, and which consisted of a multitude of trees thickly planted in impervious hedges, covering sometimes several acres of ground. . . . [Fig. 8]  
of it is called the geometric style of gardening.”
+
: “It has been remarked, that the geometric style would always be preferred in a new country, or in any country where the amount of land under cultivation is much less than that covered with natural woods and forests; as the inhabitants being surrounded by scenery abounding with natural beauty, would always incline to lay out their gardens and pleasure-grounds in regular forms, because the distinct exhibition of art would give more pleasure by contrast, than the elegant imitation of beautiful nature. That this is true as regards the mass of uncultivated minds, we do not deny. But at the same time we affirm that it evinces a meagre taste, and a lower state of the art, or a lower perception of beauty in the individual who employs the geometrical style in such cases. . . . :
Downing, A. J., 1849, A Treatise on the Theory and
+
“The only situation where this brilliant [white] gravel seems to us perfectly in keeping, is in the highly artificial garden of the ancient or geometric style, or in the symmetrical terrace flower garden adjoining the house. In these instances its striking appearance is in excellent keeping with the expression of all the surrounding objects, and it renders more forcible and striking the highly artificial and artistical character of the scene; and to such situations we would gladly see its use limited.”
Practice of Landscape Gardening (pp. 21–22, 27,
 
91–93, 531)
 
 
 
“All late authors agree in these two distinct  
 
and widely different modes of the art; 1st, the  
 
Ancient, Formal, or Geometric Style; 2d, the  
 
Modern, Natural, or Irregular Style.  
 
 
 
“THE ANCIENT STYLE. A predominance of  
 
regular forms and right lines is the characteristic  
 
feature of the ancient style of gardening. The value  
 
of art, of power, and of wealth, were at once easily  
 
and strongly shown by an artificial arrangement of  
 
all the materials; an arrangement the more striking,  
 
as it differed most widely from nature. And in  
 
an age when costly and stately architecture was  
 
most abundant, as in the times of the Roman  
 
empire, it is natural to suppose, that the symmetry  
 
and studied elegance of the palace, or the villa,  
 
would be transferred and continued in the surrounding  
 
gardens. . . .  
 
 
 
“Pliny’s garden, of which a pretty minute  
 
account remains,—filled with cypresses and bay  
 
trees, planted to form a coursing place or hippodrome,  
 
adorned with vis-à-vis figures of animals  
 
cut in box trees, and decorated with fountains and  
 
marble alcoves, shaded by vines—seems, indeed,  
 
to have been the true classical type of all the later  
 
efforts of modern continental nations in their geometric  
 
gardens. . . .  
 
 
 
“It would appear to be an undeniable fact in  
 
the history of ornamental gardening that, from  
 
the time of William the Conqueror down to the  
 
latter part of the reign of Queen Anne, and the  
 
beginning of that of George I., nothing was considered  
 
garden scenery except [if] it was in the formal  
 
and geometric style....  
 
 
 
“One of the favorite fancies of the geometric  
 
gardener was the Labyrinth . . . of which a few celebrated  
 
examples are still in existence in England,  
 
and which consisted of a multitude of trees thickly  
 
planted in impervious hedges, covering sometimes  
 
several acres of ground. . . . [Fig. 8]  
 
 
 
“It has been remarked, that the geometric style  
 
would always be preferred in a new country, or in  
 
any country where the amount of land under cultivation  
 
is much less than that covered with natural  
 
woods and forests; as the inhabitants being surrounded  
 
by scenery abounding with natural beauty,  
 
would always incline to lay out their gardens and  
 
pleasure-grounds in regular forms, because the distinct  
 
exhibition of art would give more pleasure by  
 
contrast, than the elegant imitation of beautiful  
 
nature. That this is true as regards the mass of  
 
uncultivated minds, we do not deny. But at the  
 
same time we affirm that it evinces a meagre taste,  
 
and a lower state of the art, or a lower perception of  
 
beauty in the individual who employs the geometrical  
 
style in such cases. . . .  
 
 
 
“The only situation where this brilliant [white]  
 
gravel seems to us perfectly in keeping, is in the  
 
highly artificial garden of the ancient or geometric  
 
style, or in the symmetrical terrace flower garden  
 
adjoining the house. In these instances its striking  
 
appearance is in excellent keeping with the expression  
 
of all the surrounding objects, and it renders  
 
more forcible and striking the highly artificial and  
 
artistical character of the scene; and to such situations  
 
we would gladly see its use limited.”
 
  
 
==Images==
 
==Images==

Revision as of 21:47, February 9, 2016

See also: Ancient style

History

The term geometric style came into use only when it was necessary to make a distinction between the traditional mode of laying out gardens and the newer modern, natural, or irregular style. Geometric, ancient, and formal were terms used interchangeably to describe gardens laid out symmetrically in straight lines, with strong axial circulation paths and geometrically regular beds [Fig. 1] (see Ancient style). The style was associated with French, Anglo-Dutch, and Italian traditions of gardening (see Dutch style and French style). In America, the geometric style continued to be popular long after the natural or modern style was introduced. As part of a larger landscaped garden, the flower garden was a feature that lent itself to regular shapes. Early public buildings such as the Governor’s Palace in Williamsburg, Va. [Fig. 2], and Governor’s House in New Bern, N.C. [Fig. 3], were laid out in a geometric style although, again, the term was used only after the modern style had become popular. The geometric style continued to be used in public places because of its long-standing association with centers of government.

The geometric style was also used well into the nineteenth century for domestic landscapes throughout the colonies. Often found in town gardens, this style suited the orthogonal layout of street plans and small lots. [1] It was equally prevalent in the plantation landscape throughout the South [Fig. 4]. [2]

A. J. Downing’s description of Lemon Hill in Philadelphia explained the symmetry, uniformity, and high art of the geometric mode, listing the standard features of the style with its artificial plantations and highly regularized gardens. A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening (1849) contains a miniature vignette of the two main modes of garden design [Fig. 5]. Downing’s descriptions of earlier American gardens, such as Lemon Hill, were respectful from a historical point of view. However, he denigrated his compatriots who continued to practice this mode. His English contemporary, Jane Loudon, whose work he was the first to publish in this country, described the geometric style succinctly without the negative tone found in garden writings such as Downing’s. Mrs. Loudon offered the style as an alternative, suitable and appropriate wherever symmetrical architecture existed. The term “artificial” was often used synonymously with “geometric,” especially when opposed to the so-called natural (or modern style), as in the quotations of George Watterston and Downing.

-- Therese O'Malley

Texts

Usage

  • Downing, A. J., January 1837, “Notices on the State and Progress of Horticulture in the United States” (Magazine of Horticulture 3: 8)
“The finest single example of landscape gardening, in the modern style, is at Dr. Hosack’s seat, Hyde Park, and the best specimens of the ancient or geometric style may probably be met with in the neighborhood of Philadelphia.”


  • W., February 1842, describing Lowell Cemetery, Lowell, Mass. (Magazine of Horticulture 8: 49)
“In laying out these grounds, the skill of the designer has been displayed, in combining somewhat the ‘ancient or geometric style’ with the natural or irregular. In some parts, the regular forms and right lines are well adapted to the location of the ground, while in others, the varied and gradually curving forms give an air of grandeur and boldness, and in combining these with the natural scenery, cannot fail to call forth, in the minds of visitors, impressions of love and veneration.”


  • Downing, A. J., 1849, describing Lemon Hill, estate of Henry Pratt, Philadelphia, Pa. (p. 43)
“Lemon Hill, half a mile above the Fairmount waterworks of Philadelphia, was, 20 years ago, the most perfect specimen of the geometric mode in America, and since its destruction by the extension of the city, a few years since, there is nothing comparable with it, in that style, among us. All the symmetry, uniformity, and high art of the old school, were displayed here in artificial plantations, formal gardens with trellises, grottoes, spring-houses, temples, statues, and vases, with numerous ponds of water, jets-d’eau, and other water-works, parterres and an extensive range of hothouses. The effect of this garden was brilliant and striking; its position, on the lovely banks of the Schuylkill, admirable; and its liberal proprietor, Mr. Pratt, by opening it freely to the public, greatly increased the popular taste in the neighborhood of that city.”

Citations

  • Loudon, J. C., 1826, An Encyclopaedia of Gardening (pp. 1005–6, 1020–21)
“7205. In planting in the geometric style, the first consideration is the nature of the whole or general design; and here, as in the ground, geometric forms will still prevail, and while the masses reflect forms from the house, or represent squares, triangles, or trapeziums, the more minute parts, characterised by lines rather than forms, such as avenues, rows, clumps, and stars, &c. are contained in parallelograms, squares, or circles. In regard to the parts, masses and avenues should extend from the house in all directions, so far as to diffuse around the character of design; and as much farther in particular directions as the nature of the surface admits of, the distant beauties suggest, and the character of the mansion requires. In disposing these masses, whether on a flat or irregular surface, regard will be had to leave uncovered such a quantity of lawn or turf as shall, at all events, admit a free circulation of air, give breadth of light, and display the form of the large masses of wood. Uniformity and variety as a whole, and use as well as beauty in the parts, must be kept constantly in view. Avenues, alleys, and vistas, should serve as much as possible as roads, walks, lines of fences, or screens of shelter or shade; but where this is not the case, they should point to some distant beauties, or near artificial objects, to be seen at or beyond their termination. The outer extremities of artificial plantations may either join natural woods, other artificial scenes, cultivated lands, or barren heaths or commons. . . .
“7262. The lawn, or that breadth of mown turf formed in front of, or extending in different directions from, the garden-front of the house, is, in the geometric style, varied by architectural forms, levels, and slopes; and in the modern by a picturesque or painter-like disposition of groups, placed so as to connect with the leading masses, and throw the lawn into an agreeable shape or shapes. In very small villas the lawn may embrace the garden or principal front of the house, without the intervention of terrace-scenery, and may be separated from the park, or park-like field, by a light wire fence; but in more extensive scenes it should embrace a terrace, or some avowedly artificial architectural basis to the mansion, and a sunk wall, as a distant separation, will be more dignified and permanent than any iron fence. The park may come close up to the terrace-garden, especially in a flat situation, or where the breadth of the terrace is considerable. . . .
“7265. The park. . . . In the geometric style, the more distant or concealed parts were subdivided into fields, surrounded by broad stripes or double rows, enclosed in walls or hedges, and the nearer parts were chiefly covered with wood, enclosing regular surfaces of pasturage.”


  • Anonymous, 1 April 1837, “Landscape Gardening” (Horticultural Register 3: 124)
“The uniformity produced by straight walks and alleys bordered by regular rows of trees, another characteristic of the old or geometrical style, though pleasing at first, soon becomes tiresome.”


  • Loudon, J. C., 1838, The Suburban Gardener (pp. 529–31)
“A Villa Residence of Two Acres, within a regular Boundary, laid out in the Geometrical Style.— The object in this case is to produce a splendid effect at a moderate expense of annual keeping, but with no regard to profit. The general form of the ground is that of a parallelogram, and its disposition is so clearly shown in the isometrical view. . . that it will require little or no description. The entrance is through a straight avenue to a flight of steps, which leads to a raised platform on which the house stands. To the right and left of the avenue are double rows of trees, which may be fruit-bearing kinds, such as the apple, pear, cherry, and plum. Beyond these, on each side, are two small kitchen-gardens, intended for gooseberries, strawberries, and other small fruits, and for pot-herbs, tart rhubarb, spinach, kidneybeans, and a few such vegetables as are desirable to have always at hand. The house and these kitchen-gardens occupy about half the entire residence.The other half is laid out in the form of a sunk flower-garden, consisting of a variety of curvilinear beds, bordered by a kerb of stone, and surrounded by turf. From the terrace walks there are four descents to this garden, each consisting of a double flight of steps. Each bed is supposed to be planted with one kind of herbaceous plant, so as to produce large masses of colour. The mode of selecting plants for this purpose, as well as lists of suitable plants, have been already given (p. 217 to p. 226), and further resources will be found in our catalogue. The sloping border between the sunk area and the flower-garden may either be planted with low evergreen shrubs, with roses kept low, or it may be in turf, or in rockwork: in the latter case, it may be covered with a collection of rock plants. Perhaps the most appropriate disposition of this sloping border would be to vary it with ornaments of box, on a ground of turf, so as to give it the appearance of an architectural moulding. In the centre there is a fountain. In situations where so much turf was not desirable, the walks between the beds might be of gravel or paved; but they will produce the best effect in turf.” [Fig. 6]


  • W., M. A., February 1840, “On Flower Beds” (Magazine of Horticulture 6: 52)
“It is probably as difficult to fix upon the most suitable plant for the edging of a flower bed, as it is to determine the best shrub for a hedge around fields. For the borders of main avenues, or broad walks in grounds of considerable extent, box, as recommended, Vol. V., p. 350, is undoubtedly the best; but for small parterres, or the flower beds in a front door yard, it seems much less suitable. They can commonly be taken in at one glance of the eye, and notwithstanding all that has been said of the artificial or geometric style, it is the proper one for such places; for symmetry, or a perfect balance of corresponding parts, greatly strengthens the impression of such a scene, taken as a whole, or single mass of objects. The beds, therefore, will not only be small, but when there is the proper variety in the form of them, some, at least, must have quite acute angles. Box, if thrifty, (and, sickly, it would be an eyesore any where,) soon takes up too much space in breadth.”


  • Watterston, George, May 1844, “Landscape Gardening” (pp. 307–8, 310–11)
“The Dutch style, introduced by William III., and which prevailed in England for about fifty years was not much better, and was distinguished for sloped terraces formed of grass, land and water made into regular shapes by art, and adorned with trees in pots, or ‘planted alternately and clipped to preserve the most perfect regularity of shape’— and leisure, ‘in trim gardens, took his pleasure.’ ‘The compass and the square,’ says Walpole, ‘were of more use than the nurseryman. The measured walk, the quincunx and the étoile imposed their unsatisfying sameness on every royal and noble garden. Trees were headed and their sides pared away; many French groves seem green chests set upon poles. Seats of marble, arbors and summer houses terminated every vista, and symmetry, even when the space was too large to permit its being remarked at one view, was so essential, that, as Pope observed,
‘Grove nods to grove, each alley has a brother
And half the platform just reflects the other.’
This formal, or geometric style was all the rage at the commencement of the 17th century in those parts of Europe where ornamental gardening prevailed, and the most distinguished artist of that age, if artist he could be called, was Le Notre....
“In passing from the ancient, or geometric style, to the modern, or natural, the first improvers fell, perhaps, into an opposite extreme.

This is the danger in all sudden transitions. They seemed to conceive that crooked lines, serpentine windings and carelessness were true objects of beauty, and declared that nature abhorred a straight line; and thus fatigued the eye by incessant curves. They did not seem to be aware, that in her sublimest works nature prefers the straight line, as is shown in the apparent horizon of the ocean and the rays of the sun.”


  • Loudon, Jane, 1845, Gardening for Ladies (pp. 221–22)
“GEOMETRIC GARDENS.—This style of gardening is that in which the shape of the ground, of the beds, of the walks, and even of the shrubs, is regular, or symmetrical; such as may be formed on paper by a rule and compass. The ground, if originally flat, is reduced to a general level surface, over which the beds, or borders, are distributed so as to form figures, either simply regular, such as squares and parallelograms, repeated one after another—or squares and parallelograms, and circles or ovals, or other curvilinear figures,—so arranged as to be symmetrical; that is to say, that one-half of the figure formed by the whole shall correspond with the other half. When the surface is naturally irregular or on a slope, it is thrown into different levels, which are joined by steep slopes called terraces, generally covered with turf, and ascended and descended by stone steps. Each of the levels is laid out either regularly or symmetrically, in the same manner as if the whole were only one bed; but the figures are of course smaller. Small trees or evergreen shrubs are distributed among the figures, and especially on each side of the main walks; and these trees or shrubs ought, in strict accordance with the style, to be cut or clipped into regular shapes; such as cones, pyramids, balls, candelabra, statues of men or animals, arcades, columns, or other architectural figures. In modern practice, this is generally neglected; but its omission is a defect, for cut trees are as essential to the geometric style, as having the ground cut or shaped into artificial surfaces.”


  • Thomas, John J., April 1848, “The Shrubbery and Flower Garden” (The Cultivator 5: 114)
“Nearly all the flower gardens of the country are laid out in geometrical lines; a style, it is true much better adapted to the small piece of ground allotted to flowers, than to the larger landscape garden composed of trees, lawns, and sheets of water. With a wish however, to encourage a more

graceful, pleasing, and picturesque mode of laying out even the small flower garden in connexion with the shrubbery, we have given the above plan, which nearly explains itself.”


  • Downing, A. J., May 1848, “Design for a Small Flower Garden” (Horticulturist 2: 503)
“The old geometric flower gardens, laid out with long beds, bordered with box, and separated by stiff gravel walks, are fast giving place to those more tasteful combinations of masses of gay, perpetual flowering plants, arranged upon turf, in the arabesque or English style.
“In the former, you have a miscellaneous collection of plants, of all sizes and habits of growth, only a small part of which are seen in bloom at one time; while at almost all seasons naked stalks of plants, and bare dry soil borders, appear here and there, almost in spite of the best efforts of the gardener, to disfigure and mar the general elegance of the scene.
“In the latter, you have always the rich setting of the soft green turf, (which, of course mown once a fortnight, is short and velvet-like) and contrasting and enhanced in effect by this, are seen the beds of dwarfish plants, grown in masses, so as to give breadth and brilliancy of effect; these being composed only of plants almost perpetually in bloom, unite to form a floral picture, when well managed, as beautiful as the art of gardening will permit.”


  • Valk, Dr. William W., June 1848, “Design for a Geometric Flower Garden” (Horticulturist 2: 557–58)
“I send you a plan for a geometrical flower garden. It was designed by Mr. Brown, gardener to the late Duke of Buckingham, and is a very pretty thing of the kind.
“When the nature of the ground will admit, the French parterre, or geometrical flower garden, is, above all others, the most to be recommended, for many situations, because it readily admits of the largest display of flowers throughout the season. There is scarcely any difficulty in producing a splendid show once or twice in the year, spring and autumn; and in consequence of many gentlemen not residing all the season near their flower gardens, the gardeners have an additional advantage in such places to produce, at the required time, the best display of flowers.” [Fig. 7]


  • Elder, Walter, 1849, The Cottage Garden of America (p. 26)
“If [the rich man’s lawn is constructed] in the geometrical style, the trees will stand in lines or figures; some cut into different shapes and forms, from a seat to a temple.”


  • Ranlett, William H., 1849, The Architect ([1849] 1976: 4)
“Landscape Gardening was, formerly, the imitation of geometric figures; hence the ancient mode of it is called the geometric style of gardening.”


  • Downing, A. J., 1849, A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening (pp. 21–22, 27, 91–93, 531)
“All late authors agree in these two distinct and widely different modes of the art; 1st, the Ancient, Formal, or Geometric Style; 2d, the Modern, Natural, or Irregular Style.
“THE ANCIENT STYLE. A predominance of regular forms and right lines is the characteristic feature of the ancient style of gardening. The value of art, of power, and of wealth, were at once easily and strongly shown by an artificial arrangement of all the materials; an arrangement the more striking, as it differed most widely from nature. And in an age when costly and stately architecture was most abundant, as in the times of the Roman empire, it is natural to suppose, that the symmetry and studied elegance of the palace, or the villa, would be transferred and continued in the surrounding gardens. ...
“Pliny’s garden, of which a pretty minute account remains,—filled with cypresses and bay trees, planted to form a coursing place or hippodrome, adorned with vis-à-vis figures of animals cut in box trees, and decorated with fountains and marble alcoves, shaded by vines—seems, indeed, to have been the true classical type of all the later efforts of modern continental nations in their geometric gardens. . . .
“It would appear to be an undeniable fact in the history of ornamental gardening that, from the time of William the Conqueror down to the latter part of the reign of Queen Anne, and the beginning of that of George I., nothing was considered garden scenery except [if] it was in the formal and geometric style....
“One of the favorite fancies of the geometric gardener was the Labyrinth . . . of which a few celebrated examples are still in existence in England, and which consisted of a multitude of trees thickly planted in impervious hedges, covering sometimes several acres of ground. . . . [Fig. 8]
“It has been remarked, that the geometric style would always be preferred in a new country, or in any country where the amount of land under cultivation is much less than that covered with natural woods and forests; as the inhabitants being surrounded by scenery abounding with natural beauty, would always incline to lay out their gardens and pleasure-grounds in regular forms, because the distinct exhibition of art would give more pleasure by contrast, than the elegant imitation of beautiful nature. That this is true as regards the mass of uncultivated minds, we do not deny. But at the same time we affirm that it evinces a meagre taste, and a lower state of the art, or a lower perception of beauty in the individual who employs the geometrical style in such cases. . . . :

“The only situation where this brilliant [white] gravel seems to us perfectly in keeping, is in the highly artificial garden of the ancient or geometric style, or in the symmetrical terrace flower garden adjoining the house. In these instances its striking appearance is in excellent keeping with the expression of all the surrounding objects, and it renders more forcible and striking the highly artificial and artistical character of the scene; and to such situations we would gladly see its use limited.”

Images

Notes

  1. For a discussion of geometric layouts of Louisiana gardens, see Suzanne Turner, “Roots of a Regional Garden Tradition: The Drawings of the New Orleans Notarial Archives,” in Regional Garden Design in the United States, ed. T. O’Malley and M. Treib (Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1995), 163–90, view on Zotero.
  2. For a discussion of the geometrical principles of plantation layouts, see C. Allan Brown, “Eighteenth-Century Virginia Plantation Gardens: Translating an Ancient Idyll,” in Regional Garden Design in the United States, 125–62, view on Zotero.

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