Italian Gardens
From Petrarch to Russell Page
By Helena Attlee Photographs by Alex Ramsay
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Online price: £30.00
This title is currently availableRRP: £30.00 You save £0.00 (0% discount) Hardback, 208pp Published: 1st November 2006 Category: Gardens & parks, Travel & places |
A fascinating account of the development of Italian horticulture from the late middle ages to the present day. Brilliantly illustrated. - Art Book
To many of us, the great gardens of Italy seem like paradise on earth. But how much do we know of their history, and the people who created them?
In this ravishing book, illustrated with contemporary paintings, drawings and prints as well as photographs of the gardens today, Helena Attlee tells their story. She starts with Petrarch – still looking to medieval chronicles for advice on how and when to plant – and goes on to the Renaissance and those first gardens to emerge from architects' plans. Then she describes the great gardens of the Medici; the first botanic gardens; the weird Mannerist gardens and their grottoes followed by the Baroque splendour of Isola Bella and the Villa Aldobrandini; the Neoclassical and Picturesque gardens of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; and how, in the twentieth century, expatriates with money to lavish on their villas and gardens brought new delights.
208 pages
150 colour photographs

