Great Gardens of the Western World

Front Cover
Putnam, 1963 - Gardens - 288 pages
Great Gardens of the Western World is a sumptuous pictorial treasury of the finest gardens of Europe and America. Selected by Peter Coats, a well-known authority on gardening and landscape architecture, these thirty-eight most beautiful gardens are described and pictured in all their infinite variety and loveliness. Mr. Coats has arranged them in an order roughly corresponding to the dates when they were designed, showing the changing fashions from the sixteenth century to the present day and revealing the effect of the varying climates upon the appearance of the gardens themselves. Not only do we find in this magnificent book superb examples of the great formal gardens of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in France, Italy, Spain, Germany and Russia, but also several of the simpler gardens in England and Holland, where flowers and hedges tend to predominate over the more elaborate vistas of water and statuary. In the United States, gardens have taken the form of natural landscaping as well as that found in the English style of garden, and to many readers these American gardens -- Cypress, Huntingdon, Magnolia, Middleton, Old Westbury, Winterthur and those of Colonial Williamsburg -- will be among the most richly rewarding in the book. The photographs--40 plates in full colour and 350 in monochrome--depict these gardens in all their breathtaking splendour. In addition, there are many documentary drawings and engravings showing how these gardens appeared in previous centuries. These spectacular illustrations combined with the descriptive text, offer the discerning reader an incomparable treasury of the art of garden design. -- Jacket.

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