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Nature as Model - (Penn Studies in Landscape Architecture) by Luke Morgan (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Salomon de Caus has been viewed as, variously, a Protestant martyr, the unsung inventor of the steam engine, one of the most important early hydraulic engineers, and a garden designer whose work was influenced by astrology and hermeticism.
- About the Author: Luke Morgan is Lecturer in the Department of Theory of Art and Design, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
- 312 Pages
- Architecture, Landscape
- Series Name: Penn Studies in Landscape Architecture
Description
About the Book
Salomon de Caus was a pivotal figure in the dissemination of the design principles and motifs of the Italian Renaissance garden throughout Europe. By setting the record straight in this biography, Luke Morgan rewrites the received history of early seventeenth-century garden design.
Book Synopsis
Salomon de Caus has been viewed as, variously, a Protestant martyr, the unsung inventor of the steam engine, one of the most important early hydraulic engineers, and a garden designer whose work was influenced by astrology and hermeticism. The first comprehensive book on this protean figure, Nature as Model sifts through historical material, Caus's own writings, and his extant landscape designs to determine what is fact and what is fiction in the life of this polymathic and prolific figure. In doing so, it clarifies numerous hitherto unresolved problems in his biography and historiography.
As Luke Morgan shows, Caus made important contributions to some of the most significant landscape projects of his period, including the gardens of Coudenberg Palace in Brussels, Richmond Palace, Hatfield House, Somerset House, Greenwich Palace in London, as well as, most famously, the Hortus Palatinus in Heidelberg, which he designed for the Elector Palatine, Frederick V, and his wife, Elisabeth Stuart, daughter of James I of England. In his work, Caus drew on his intimate knowledge of the late sixteenth-century Italian garden, and through his commissions the design principles and motifs of the late Renaissance garden were transmitted across Europe. The book is a masterful exercise in historical reconstruction, showing how Caus has been read by subsequent generations intent on nationalism, romance, or magic. Morgan investigates the ways in which the early modern garden actually generated meaning through conventional motifs rather than through esoteric narrative programs.Review Quotes
"A volume of interest not only to specialists in landscape history but also to all those concerned with the cultural history of the period."-- "Renaissance Quarterly"
"Luke Morgan bracingly tests conjecture and assertion against evidence and a shrewdly developed chronology; he turns a coolly evaluative eye to the kinds of interpretive assumptions underlying previous accounts; and he develops a fresh picture of Caus, his career, and the intellectual culture of garden-making in the period."-- "Michael Leslie, Rhodes College"
About the Author
Luke Morgan is Lecturer in the Department of Theory of Art and Design, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.