Saturday, January 2, 2010

Blue... but not Sad - Hail to the Horticulturists!


Hail to the horticulturists!
A look back at display gardens & plant nurseries ...
garden installations & public gardens ...
 featured in 2009.
Perhaps, like me, you can't get enough of the magical blue poppy.
Above Photo:  Garden Valley Ranch
Petaluma, California
Click on garden links to view the original posts.

Berry Botanic Garden  Portland : Photo: Kris Freitag  

Cornerstone Sonoma
Photos: Alice Joyce unless otherwise indicated


Sebastopol, California

Eryngium  -  Cistus Nursery
Sauvie Island, Oregon
Photos Copyright Alice Joyce
Looking back on  2009:

Words and photos (unless otherwise noted) © Alice Joyce, Bay Area Tendrils Garden Travel
The theft of content and photos on the Internet is widespread.
For now, I'll be taking steps to insert links back to my site.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Clamor .. Murmur .. Plash! Potpourri of Fountains


Provence, France
Still pools, cascades, clamoring waterfalls & splashing fountains.
A collection of magical water gardens photographed in Spring, Summer and Fall, 
appearing on Bay Area Tendrils in 2009. 
To connect to original feature, click on garden link.

Glen Ellen, California
Classical Chinese Garden
Portland, Oregon

The theft of content and photos on the Internet is widespread.
For now, I'll be taking steps to insert links back to my site.
Darioush Winery
Napa, California
Paris, France

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Elementary! Arbor .. Pergola .. Loggia .. Colonnade

Northern California


A look at garden structures . . appearing on Bay Area Tendrils in 2009. To connect to original feature, click on garden link: Fundación Rodriguez Acosta


Granada, Spain

Words and photos © Alice Joyce  Bay Area Tendrils             
The theft of content and photos on the Internet is widespread. For now, I'll be taking steps to insert links back to my site.
Kenwood, California
Russian River Roses
Healdsburg, California

Saturday, December 19, 2009

A la recherche du cookies perdu ... Guest Post

Encounters with Remarkable Biscuits
... a diverting contrivance attributable to James Alexander-Sinclair & Mark Diacono
Link below to Guest Post, 
where childhood memories stir up a love/hate relationship with haute couture cookies.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Elegant Symmetry - Lush Greenery ... Getty Villa

An Italian Stone Pine graces an alcove near the entrance to the Getty Villa.


Architectural embellishments link the interior of the Getty Villa Museum to the exterior spaces. An inlaid marble pattern replicates a floor in the ancient Villa dei Papiri, at the Villa's Temple of Herakles.

In the Outer Peristyle garden, a bronze sculpture is placed as it would appear at the Villa dei Papiri.


Machado and  Silvetti Associates of Boston redesigned the Getty Villa site, a 12-year undertaking. Upon reopening in 2006, a contemporary take on an ancient structure emerged on the Getty campus: A 450-seat open-air classical amphitheater; approached from a new elevated walkway. T, my traveling companion, waits patiently.



In the skillfully balanced layout of the Outer Peristyle, pomegranate trees and Grecian laurels 
provide structure, abetted by sweet violets. The Outer Peristyle's formal pool ... edged in ivy topiaries. 
Gallica, damask and musk roses create background effects. 



Decorative paving enhances the garden's symmetry.
An inviting destination year-round: Admission to Getty Villa is free, however, advance timed tickets are required.
The Lion Head Fountain adorns the Herb Garden, planted with medicinal, culinary, & species with religious significance. Fruit and fragrance meld here amid plums and limes, olive and quince, peach and fig trees; the earth blanketed in ground-covering lemon balm.


The Inner Peristyle garden utilizes motifs from nature, such as Acanthus leaves.

The Inner Peristyle's intimate confines center upon a lovely reflecting pool, 
while marble basins punctuate each corner of the garden.

Women drawn to a stream are replicated in the garden's bronze sculptures.
Click on links below - Getty Villa Part I & II

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Scented, Sensuous, Darkly Dramatic! - Chocolate Flower Farm

Whidbey IslandWashington is a gardener's paradise...
And the home base for Chocolate Flower Farm, a unique plant nursery. 
Marie and Bill specialize in dark flowers and foliage,
offering tender specimens & biennials, long-lived perennials & seeds.  
Here's a sampling! Above: 
Nicotiana 'Chocolate Smoke,' this hardy annual is a strain of N. 'Hot Chocolate,' 
developed by Chocolate Flower Farm.
Aquilegia 'Single Black' .. "the little black dress" of Columbines, elegant & simple, yet quite rare.
Photos: Chocolate Flower Farm
Berlandiera lyrata - Chocolate Daisy
Grow in Zones 4 - 10 in full sun: Considered by Marie & Bill to be the best chocolate scent of all. 
A night bloomer, the flowers offer up their cocoa scent in the morning and drop their yellow petals each day.
Dierama 'Cosmos' 
Started last year from seed. It will take 3 years for plants to reach bloom stage. Be patient!
Delphinium 'Kissed By Chocolate'
Elegant white English delphiniums boasting gentle brushes of chocolate over the inky black colorations produced on 
the majority of 'Black Shades' cultivars (now known as 'Chocolate').
Dianthus 'Sooty' -  Chocolate Sweet William
Biennial in Zones 4 - 10: Grow in full sun; an excellent selection for cut flowers.
An all-time fave in my garden!
Click on link below to read one of my San Francisco Chronicle 'Plant Pick' columns, featuring 

Monday, December 7, 2009

Immersed in Art & Culture .. Getty Villa - East Garden

The intimate East Garden within the grounds of the Getty Villa ...
a walled santuary space where you'll want to linger.

Delightful feverfew .. among the plantings in the East Garden;
 reflecting an array of species known from the ancient Mediterranean,
with sycamore and laurel trees providing shade.


The wall fountain represents a replica of a mosaic and shell fountain from the House of the Large Fountain in Pompeii. In A.D. 79 Mt. Vesuvius erupted, burying Pompeii and HerculaneumEmbellishments emerge at every turn. Mosaic work, enlivened by images of birds amid colorful patterning, is likened to wall paintings found inside Roman ruins.


















UNDER CONSTRUCTION....












The heads of bronze civets, catlike creatures spout splashing streams of water into a marble basin, in the East Garden's central fountain. Adorning the wall fountain are marble theatrical masks, prevalent elements in Roman art of the first century A.D.


It's easy to get lost in the detailing of the intricate mosaic and shell work.
The source of the water flowing from the wall fountain.


















Detail:  Bronze Civets & Marble Basin

Fountains act as engaging focal points within the secluded setting.

 Evergreen strawberry trees (Arbutus unedo) line up along one wall of the garden: the ripening spiny fruit appears like dangling ornaments set off by the glossy foliage. Fragrant clusters of  bell-like flowers appear alongside the fruit, which turns from a bright gold to deep red-orange.

Acanthus leaves are depicted again and again in ancient architectural elements, 
emerging in decorations carved in stone and in wood, in columns and friezes
dating back to Greco-Roman times.
Click on link below for more on the Getty Villa Malibu

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Trompe l'oeil .. Lyrical Illusion - The Getty Villa Malibu


The Getty Villa - Malibu, California
Part I
The Malibu site opened in 1974 as the original J. Paul Getty Museum;
the architecture, patterned after the Villa dei Papiri,
a Roman country house dating to the first century. 
Restored Trompe l'oeil detail.


The Villa closed for renovation in 1997, just as The Getty Center opened to great fanfare in Los Angeles. By 2006 the cultural cognoscenti were abuzz! The Getty Villa reopened with stunning exhibition spaces, presenting an unparalleled showcase for Greco-Roman & Etruscan antiquities, and an overall stunning redesign by architects, Machado and Silvetti Associates.

The historically accurate Trompe l'oeil paintings of the Outer Peristyle garden are highlighted here. The luminous architecture of the Getty Villa, the landscape design & plantings, sculptural treasures, and classically arcadian gardens to follow in future posts.


UNDER CONSTRUCTION...











 Long view of Outer Peristyle - ceiling adornment & inlaid design of walkway.

Draped garlands, decorated columns, and window cornices are among the peristyle's ornate elements.
The refined color palette of the Trompe l'oeil painting adds grace and beauty to the surroundings.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Robert Irwin Design: Getty Center Central Garden




Artist Robert Irwin designed the Getty Center Central Garden in Los Angeles. 

The Azalea Maze is a focal point, while curving swathes of corten steel function as the garden's contoured retaining walls. Seated on a bench nestled in a secluded niche, I could appreciate the rusty patina of the metal, a sharp contrast to the sensory delights of flowers and foliage.

Prominent fossilized remains are a tactile quality of The Getty Center's Roman classic travertine, which covers a staggering 1.2 million square feet of walls and pavement.
Staggered levels of terraced planting create an amphitheater-like setting in the pool area.
Unusual plant combinations reflect Irwin's statement:
"...the garden is like a painting, not so much concerned with species and origin as with color, texture and conditioned relations."

The garden layout echoes a natural ravine in the existing topography.
Photos © Alice Joyce
Zigzag walkways traverse the hillside's gentle descent. Reaching the plaza, water cascades over the stone wall, directing one's focus down toward the Central Garden's reflecting pool.
"Listen to the changing sound of the stream... boulders have been placed...to create a sound sculpture."

Barbara Hepworth sculpture below:

It's easy to spend a good part of a day at The Gettytaking in the exhibitions and outdoor sculpture gardens, enjoying a meal al fresco,  not to mention, adding your own opinion to the ongoing dialogue about Robert Irwin's Central Garden.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Room With A View .. My Window at The Ambrose


Reaching out...


 to frame a memorable Santa Monica sunset from my window at The Ambrose:


Hotel rooms designed with feng shui principles in mind. 
Restful.....
The Ambrose in Santa Monica, California.