Gardens offer people protection, relaxation, and inspiration. Whether artificial and enclosed or seemingly wild and natural, such cultivated paradises have also spurred artists over the centuries to produce master- pieces. The range of art produced in this way s as varied as the meaning of the garden itself: Gardens in medieval paintings are often surrounded by a wall. which keeps evil out of its magical realm. For Peter Paul Rubens, the garden was a private, domestic space. Caspar David Friedrich saw himself as a mediator be-tween humankind and sublime nature. For Vincent van Gogh the garden was a screen for projecting the artist's melancholy. Impressionists like Claude Monet planted lavish gardens as real-life models for their splendidly colorful paintings.
Lende rs and
Acknowledgments
Fo rewo rd
The Painter’s Garden:Design--Inspiration--Delight
SABINES CHULZE
CataIogue numbe rs
What Is a Garden?
Thoughts of a Botanist
H.WALTE RLACK
CataIogue numbers
The Garden of Nature
ANDREASBEYER
Catalogue numhers
Paradise Lost--Paradise Regained?
John Constable’S Sense of Home and His Cloud Studies
WERNE RBUSCH
Catalogue numbe rs 35—47
Garden Memories
GUDRUNK0RNER
CataIogue numbe rs 48—61
An Outdoor Interior--The Garden,Seen from the Terrace
BEATES0NTGEN
Catalogue numbe rs 62—70
The Imaginative Space of the Impressionist Garden
J0HNH0USE
CataIogue numbe rs 71—97
Gardens of Love and Suffering
C0RNELIAH0MBURG
CataIogue numbe rs 98—117
Visions of Paradise
KLAUS BORNER
CataIogue numbe rs 1]8—135
Paul Klee’S Botanical Metamorphoses and Garden Fantasies
BARBARA ESCHENBURG
CataIogue numbe rs 136—160
Checklist
Bibliog raphy