Getty Mounts Gardens Of The Renaissance Show

| Mon, 05/27/2013 - 10:20
The Getty Centre in Los Angeles, California is mounting an exhibition dedicated to Renaissance gardens. Called 鈥楪ardens of the Renaissance鈥, the show explores gardens from the literary Garden of Love and the biblical Garden of Eden to courtly gardens of the nobility, via a range of works drawn from the Getty Museum鈥檚 permanent collection and private collectors. To coincide with the exhibition, Getty鈥檚 Central Garden will be planted with flowers, herbs and greenery commonly seen during the Renaissance in Europe. During the Renaissance, gardens and their flora were used as religious symbols in art, as signs of social status and enjoyed for their aesthetic value. All levels of Renaissance society planted and treasured gardens, whether they belonged to grandiose villas or common kitchens. In the Renaissance, gardens complemented the architectural harmony of courtly estates through plantings along a central axis and beds of herbs and flowers arranged in geometric patterns. The combination of sculptures, fountains, and topiaries in gardens expressed the patron鈥檚 control over nature. Timothy Potts, director of the J. Paul Getty Museum, said: 鈥淭his exhibition celebrates the Renaissance garden, which inherited the traditions established by the medieval monastic cloister and provided the foundation for the extravagant gardens of the Baroque period... The exhibition will include a number of exceptional objects from the museum鈥檚 collection that reflect the Renaissance appreciation for magnificent foliage, brilliant colour and landscape design. We are also in a unique position to share with visitors living examples of typical Renaissance plantings through our own garden, which I鈥檓 sure will bring the exhibition to life and greatly appeal to the many visitors who come to enjoy our spectacular gardens and landscaping.鈥 The 鈥楪ardens of the Renaissance鈥 exhibition runs from 28 May to 11 August 2013. The exhibition will be accompanied by a book, 鈥楪ardens of the Renaissance鈥, written by Bryan Keene and published by Getty Publications.