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Garden 3 | China Bower (2004), Liz Parkinson
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The garden paradise is a dream of perfection. It is a glimpse of the world individually selected to include only those aspects most desired. It is a focus of unattainable longing in its perpetual bloom. Within this
garden lies a white china bower, drawn as a fragment of a larger pattern of feminized space. The bower echoes the painted foliage on its shattered surface and the rose bushes it reaches towards. Nestled within a verdant carpet of fragrant foliage, the shards of the bower settle. The plants in this garden were chosen
from John Parkinson's 1629 garden manual A Garden of Pleasant Flowers: Paradisi in sole Paradisium Terrestris. This first garden manual describes 1000 plants that were available in England and discusses the place, the time, the names, and the virtues of each. Many of these plants are familiar in our own gardens,
having been brought to Canada by settlers as reminders of home.
Liz Parkinson's father's grandfather's grandmother gardened on Toronto Island. Liz Parkinson's mother remembers the places, the names, the times, and the virtues of the china found in her own garden.
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Garden 7 | Fancy Plants (2000), Sarah Quinton & John Armstrong
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Our garden plays on some of the conventions of European formal gardens that use picturesque frames
and borders to highlight individual specimen plants. These plants were chosen for their architectural qualities, with as much emphasis on the forms and textures of the foliage as on the flowers; they tend to be showy, sculptural and grand (if not downright weird) members of the plant kingdom. They have been used extensively as design sources in the decorative, applied and fine arts.
Since 1980, Toronto-based John Armstrong has been exhibiting his work in solo and group exhibitions throughout Canada and in Europe. He has long used images of cultivated flowers in his paintings and sculptures that engage a number of precedents in the decorative arts. Sarah Quinton has been exhibiting her work since 1985. Her art is informed by various commercial textile designs, wallpaper patterns, medieval tapestries, historical design compendia, architectural ornaments and living botanical specimens.
Sarah Quinton has been exhibiting her work since 1985. Her art is informed by various commercial textile designs, wallpaper patterns, medieval tapestries, historical design compendia, architectural ornaments and living botanical specimens.
The artists wish to thank John McKinnon for fabricating the trellis.
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Garden 13 | Play and delight, the possibilities are boundless (2003), Ted Rettig
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Many artists use play as part of creative exploration. Play with the elements of visual language, forms, shapes, sizes, textures colours; also play with ideas, images, thoughts, feelings, intuitions, to bring about allusions and the possibility of emotional resonance in the work. My long experience with sculptural language was central in planning this garden of diverse elements.
Ted Rettig has been exhibiting since
1974. He lives in Toronto and teaches in the Department of Art at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario.
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Garden 23 | Toronto Island Construction Site (2002), Michael Davey & Delwyn Higgens
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Toronto Island has always been a site for development plans, large and small. Of late, the island's waterways have become home to an expanding beaver population that has undertaken its own form of land management. In all this activity, what is never in doubt is the industriousness of the animal, and it is this quality that inspired our founding fathers to choose the beaver as Canada's emblem. But, if we work hard we also play hard, and hockey is our leisure time passion. We give a nod to hockey legend, Dick Irvin Sr. who, reputedly, collected hockey sticks for use in his garden as supports for his prized tomato vines. We have forgone the tomatoes in favour of raspberries as these flourish on the island. On the blades of the hockey sticks are drawings showing the succession in evolution of community homes from wall tent to cottage.
Michael Davey is a sculptor and fine arts instructor based in Toronto. His work has been exhibited and collected across Canada and abroad.
Delwyn Higgens is a freelance arts writer, curator and artist who loves to garden.
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