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Certain pleasures, ambiguous grounds: the etymology and evolution of the pleasure garden
‘Pleasure garden’ and ‘pleasure ground’ are two terms with ambiguous meanings in the landscape historian's vocabulary. While they are used to describe spatial patterns designed for human usage from the seventeenth century to the present, their specific characteristics are not constant, resulting over time in at least three different, even contradictory, definitions. Multiple uses lead to confusion in which the terms and the spaces they represent are largely irrelevant as open space models in discussions of designed landscapes. Seeking a way through which the etymology of these terms might be better understood, the author first examines references and their evolutionary uses from the seventeenth century to the present. Then the different ways that recent landscape historians have used the terms_as a means through which present-day designers and landscape historians might become better acquainted with this typology's evolution—are explored.
Certain pleasures, ambiguous grounds: the etymology and evolution of the pleasure garden
‘Pleasure garden’ and ‘pleasure ground’ are two terms with ambiguous meanings in the landscape historian's vocabulary. While they are used to describe spatial patterns designed for human usage from the seventeenth century to the present, their specific characteristics are not constant, resulting over time in at least three different, even contradictory, definitions. Multiple uses lead to confusion in which the terms and the spaces they represent are largely irrelevant as open space models in discussions of designed landscapes. Seeking a way through which the etymology of these terms might be better understood, the author first examines references and their evolutionary uses from the seventeenth century to the present. Then the different ways that recent landscape historians have used the terms_as a means through which present-day designers and landscape historians might become better acquainted with this typology's evolution—are explored.
Certain pleasures, ambiguous grounds: the etymology and evolution of the pleasure garden
Douglas, Lake (author)
Journal of Landscape Architecture ; 8 ; 48-53
2013-05-01
6 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2002
Online Contents | 2002
REVIEW ESSAYS - The Flowering of the Landscape Garden. English Pleasure Grounds 1720-1800
Online Contents | 2002
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