Date: 17/07/2013 12:35:12
From: neomyrtus_
ID: 350064
Subject: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/artscience/2013/07/horticultural-artists-grow-fantastical-scenes-at-the-montreal-botanical-garden/

Horticultural Artists Grow Fantastical Scenes at the Montréal Botanical Garden

Perhaps you have heard of topiary, the decorative pruning of shrubs into animals and other shapes. But, what about mosaïculture?

The term was new to me when I read the definition that organizers prescribe to at Mosaïcultures Internationales, a competition staged every three years at a park or municipal garden somewhere in the world. “Mosaïculture,” says the competition’s website, “is a refined horticultural art that involves creating and mounting living artworks made primarily from plants with colourful foliage (generally annuals, and occasionally perennials).”

The process works a bit like this. To start, horticultural artists build metal frames for their sculptures. They cover the frames with soil netting and then plant seeds of different flora in that soil, much like a ceramicist lays tiles in a mosaic. The task draws on an artist’s skills in a variety of different areas, notes Mosaïcultures Internationales—”on sculpture for its structure and volume, on painting for its palette, and on horticulture in its use of plants in a living, constantly changing environment.” Grown in greenhouses during the spring months, the artworks, when fully grown, are installed outdoors, in parks and gardens.

This summer, about 50 sculptures and reliefs, consisting of some 22,000 species, dot a 1.3-mile path through the Montréal Botanical Garden, site of Mosaïcultures Internationales de Montréal 2013. More than 200 horticultural artists from 20 countries submitted work that represents their cultures and fits with the “Land of Hope” theme, meant to showcase Earth’s biodiversity; they are vying for a jury-selected Grand Honorary Award and a People’s Choice Award. Here are a few for you to enjoy:

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Date: 17/07/2013 12:48:10
From: Michael V
ID: 350066
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

Nice.

Also interesting they used a dieresis in their new word.

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Date: 17/07/2013 12:49:43
From: roughbarked
ID: 350067
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

Michael V said:


Nice.

Also interesting they used a dieresis in their new word.

Indeed interestingly nice.

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Date: 17/07/2013 13:01:47
From: Bubblecar
ID: 350071
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

Amusing, but not the sort of thing I’d want in my own garden.

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Date: 17/07/2013 13:05:13
From: buffy
ID: 350072
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

I look at that and think….so much work…..for something so ephemeral.

And I’m not much into really controlled plants either. I do hedge my rosemary, but that’s as much to promote new fresh growth for using as anything else. And I try to keep lavender tidy.

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Date: 17/07/2013 13:09:50
From: kii
ID: 350073
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

pfft..that’s what my garden looks like w/o any people from Canadia.

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Date: 17/07/2013 13:11:10
From: neomyrtus_
ID: 350074
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

buffy said:

I look at that and think….so much work…..for something so ephemeral.

It’s art. They’re entries from 20 countries showcasing a feature of each country, by that country, for what is a classic garden exhibition. Like the Chelsea flower show, bringing in paying visitors to see a summer spectacle.

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Date: 17/07/2013 13:15:55
From: Bubblecar
ID: 350076
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

Wonder how a real orangutan would react to those grass ones.

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Date: 17/07/2013 13:46:25
From: Divine Angel
ID: 350081
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

It’s nice to see Edward Scissorhands is holding down a job at the Montreal Botanic Gardens.

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Date: 17/07/2013 13:54:19
From: kii
ID: 350082
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

Divine Angel said:


It’s nice to see Edward Scissorhands is holding down a job at the Montreal Botanic Gardens.

*snort * :D

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Date: 21/07/2013 14:31:04
From: headsie
ID: 352734
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

Not the same but similar, I visited Noto in sicily for their flower festival. The photos are of pictures created with flower petals and coffee grindings. Unfortunately it happened to be a windy day.

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Date: 21/07/2013 14:37:17
From: Bubblecar
ID: 352738
Subject: re: Canoodlian topiaries take the cake

Ta headsie, nice snaps.

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