Unnatural Horizons Allen Weiss
Unnatural Horizons Allen Weiss
Unnatural Horizons Allen Weiss
WEISS
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
PARADOX
&
CONTRADICTION
in
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
Allen S. Weiss
Weiss.
Editing and design: Clare Jacobson 1994); Flamme et festin: Une poitique de la
84 No Mans Garden
New England Transcendentalism and the
Invention of Virgin Nature
155 Notes
171 Bibliography
175 Acknowledgments
Words and rocks contain a language that follows a syntax ofsplits and
ruptures.
Robert Smithson
for
Ron Scapp, Earth
Hibou Blanc, Air
Leonard Schwartz
Syncretism and Style
Hypnerotomachia Poliphili and the
Italian Renaissance Garden
CM
ty and
gruities
ideahrt'.
that arise
ost
in
of the history of Western philosophy and
theology from Parmenides through
attempted to resolve the inherent contradic-
tions between sensation and cognition,
However, the paradoxes, antinomies, and incon-
this
ideas.
H^el
numerous
This study
has
\Tsibih-
promenade through the landscapes and gardens, paintings and
poems that have inspired me proposes a sketch of the implications
lines the sense of the morning airs and the trembling light on the distant
ocean, or of the giandeur of the stoim-beaten torest, but he makes tbe ascent
of k)fty peaks, with the only possible obfect of en^vying the view the first
(1304-74), often cited as the first humanist, indeed the first "mod-
ern" man. His relation to the landscape was intense and manifold,
poetic and practical, as he was a gardener whose favorite site of med-
itation was his own gardens at Fontaine-de-Vaucluse. He describes
I made two gardens for myself: one in the shade, appropriate for my studies,
which I called my transalpine Parnassus; it slopes down to the river Sorgue,
ending on inaccessible rocks which can only be reached by birds. The other
is closer to the house, less wild, and situated in the middle of a rapid river. I
enter it by a litde bridge leading from a vaulted grotto, where the sun never
penetrates; I believe that it resembles that small room where Cicero some-
times went to recite; it is an invitation to study, to which I go at noon.^
Two gardens, one for each side of his temperament, inspired either
and empirical; for while these gardens evoked the great sites of clas-
sic culture, they also constituted a rudimentary botanical laboratory
and collection, where Petrarch experimented with different varieties
and the real, the physical and the mystic; they echo with the adam-
ic garden, the paradigmatic place and origin from which gardens
draw their spiritual energy."^ It is precisely for this reason that the
Thessaly, with its attendant views the experience shifted from the
tual density by being couched in myth and history. "At first, owing
to the unaccustomed quality of the air and the effect of the great
sweep of view spread out before me, I stood like one dazed. I beheld
the clouds under our feet, and what I had read of Athos and
Olympus seemed less incredible as I myself witnessed the same
things from a mountain of less fame."^
The force of the poet's vision surpasses all previous literary
third term that mediates the poetic imagination and the natural
world? The letter continues with a detailed appreciation of the mul-
tiplicity and uniqueness of the natural world Petrarch witnessed,
until the moment he realizes, in a flash of intuition, that the ascent
of the body must be accompanied by a concomitant ascent of the
soul. Thus, opening a copy of Saint Augustine's Confessions he had
with him, he felicitously chanced upon the following passage: "And
men go about to wonder at the heights of the mountains, and the
mighty waves of the sea, and the wide sweep of the rivers, and the
circuit of the ocean, and the revolution of the stars, but themselves
they consider not."^ This is the ironic moment of revelation, where
experience becomes allegory and visibility becomes a metaphor for
spirituality:
I dosed the book, angry with myself that I should still be admiring earthly
things who might long ago have learned from even the pagan philosophers
Mont Ventoux seen from Malauctne
that nothing is wonderftil but the soul, which, when great itself, finds noth-
ing great outside itself. Then, in truth, I was satisfied that I had seen enough
of the mountain; I turned my inward eye upon myself, and from that time
not a syllable fell from my lips until we reached the bottom again.
symbols and allegories would henceforth enrich all the arts, radical-
With his new. Christian ideal of love, Francis of Assisi broke through and rose
above that dogmatic and rigid barrier between "nature" and "spirit." Mystical
sentiment tries to permeate the entirety of existence; before it, barriers of par-
the source and the transcendent origin of being; nor does it remain confined
ship. It overflows to all creatures, to the animals and plants, to the sun and
glorious and beatific lyricism that has inspired those who would
transform nature according to human desire and volition into a new
form that would become the "humanist" garden.
Yet the major paradigm at work in establishing new ways of
experiencing and re-creating the landscape did not stem from theo-
Virgil's Eclogues and Georgics, and the writings of Pliny, Cicero, and
Horace, with the latter's crucial notion of ut pictura poesis. The rise
"The lyrical mood does not see in nature the opposite of physical
reality; rather it feels everywhere in nature the traces and the echo
of the soul. For Petrarch, landscape becomes the living mirror of
the Ego."^
rior, encompassing not only the ambient scene, but also distant
14
SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
famiglia (c. 1430), a treatise on family life that celebrated the advan-
tages of country living, thus instilling a taste for gardens and the
landscape; Delia pittura (1436), which codified the system of linear
ing site was a sloping terrain with open perspectives from which the
countryside could be seen. Though the view into the garden was
combined with an, has turned into artifice. From the two has
tury EngUsh garden, where the desire to dissimulate all artifice estab-
began to modify the relatively rigid and often dogmatic closure and
hairsplitting of medieval scholasticism. According to medieval
thought, the closed, ordered, hierarchical universe, that "great chain
of being" of ecclesiastic Aristotelianism, was one with a moral and
religious system of judgment and salvation in which the role of epis-
temology was a ftmction of man's limited place in that system.'^
no possible proportion between the finite and the infinite, thus loos-
ening the bond that had held together scholastic theology and logic
within a homogeneous system. As a result of this separation of
realms (human from divine, relative from absolute infinity), the syl-
19
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
by Cassirer:
The De docta ignorantia had begun with the proposition that all knowledge is
In the arts, this is most apparent in the relation between theory and
practice in Leonardo da Vinci and Leon Battista Alberti, the latter
tions in his own work. Yet while Cusanus was mainly preoccupied
itable compendium of the arts, with its library, music room, and gal-
leries of artworks. This would suggest not only that nature and its
ticism. Whence the new status of the dignity of man, who is seen
attributes with both the lower and the higher beings, midway
between the cosmic mind and the cosmic soul above, and the realms
of nature and of pure, formless matter below. As the terms of this
God says: "I fill and penetrate and contain heaven and earth; I fill and am not
myself am the faculty of containing." But all these predicates claimed by the
and Phaedrus, Ficino places mystical love (in a manner very differ-
ent from that of Saint Francis's more immediately sensual and intu-
es Himself to effuse His essence into the world, and which, inversely, caus-
es His creatures to seek reunion with Him. According to Ficino, amor is only
another name for that self-reverting current {circuitus spiritualise from God to
the world and from the world to God. The loving individual inserts himself
poreal world.^^ Within this context, three sorts of love are possible:
amor divinus (divine love, ruled by the intellect), amor humanus
(human love, ruled by all the other faculties of the soul), and amor
ferinus (bestial love, which is tantamount to insanity). Love is the
factor that mediates the higher and lower worlds, transcendence and
immanence, cognition and perception. Cassirer stresses the import
of this theory for an incipient humanism:
This contradictory nature of Eros constitutes the truly active moment of the
Platonic cosmos. A dynamic motif penetrates the static complex of the uni-
verse. The world of appearance and the world of love no longer stand simply
opposed to each other; rather, the appearance itself "strives" for the idea.^'
this chapter.
the "divine influence," when contrasted with the shapelessness and lifelessness
of sheer matter, is, at the same time, a place of unending struggle, ugliness
and distress, when contrasted with the celestial, let alone the super-celestial
world.^
The human soul is the site of the reflection and expression, if not
quite the resolution or synthesis, of these universal antinomies and
divine love, and thus connected to what will later be subsumed under
the rubric of the sublime through the human act of contemplation.
In this theory of Platonic love, the artists of the Renaissance
found a system that expressed their most profound aesthetic con-
cerns, notably that the eternal values of beauty and harmony they
sought need be expressed through material forms. Thus the artist is
thetically at stake:
23
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
The enigmatic double nature of the artist, his dedication to the world of sen-
sible appearance and his constant reaching and striving beyond it, now
seemed to be comprehended, and through this comprehension really justified
for the first time. The theodicy of the world given by Ficino in his doctrine
of Eros had, at the same time, become the true theodicy of art. For the task
of the artist, precisely like that of Eros, is always to join things that are sepa-
rate and opposed. He seeks the "invisible" in the "visible," the "intelligible"
in the "sensible." Although his intuition and his art are determined by his
vision of the pure form, he only truly possesses this pure form if he succeeds in
realizing it in matter. The artist feels this tension, this polar opposition of the
^5
elements of being more deeply than anyone else.
This new metaphysics of art was in great part based upon the notion
of the representable order of nature. The subsequent imaging of the
world became a function of the profound affinities between mathe-
matical research and aesthetic production, insofar as they both share
mos. Cassirer: "For now, the mathematical idea, the a priori' of pro-
portion and of harmony, constitutes the common principle of
empirical reality and of artistic beauty. "^^ And as Cassirer insists,
regarding the primacy of form in the Renaissance poetry of writers
such as Dante and Petrarch, such lyricism does not express a preex-
istent reality with a standard form, but creates a new inner reality by
giving it a new form: "stylistics becomes the model and guide for the
visual arts. It was, indeed, a model for the new nature of thought,
where style is not a formal effect bounded by the limitations of sheer
representation, but rather where representation itself is a creative act.
gory of the body of the Virgin. In a sense, every theory of the micro-
cosm is a theory of mimesis, of levels of representation. Henceforth,
there would be a reciprocal relationship between the mimetic activ-
ity of art and the perception of nature, such that, concurrently, art
not the source of poetry, but poetry is the source of rules, and there
are as many rules as there are real poets. "^^ "Nature" had always
been, and would always be, invented. But now, the verity of this
had a fixed place in the cosmic hierarchy; the sphere of human voli-
Ficino, to the contrary, though man's role in the universe was to rec-
the higher and lower realms. Pico radicalized and potentialized this
25
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
At last the best of artisans ordained that that creature to whom He had been
able to give nothing proper to himself should have joint possession of what-
ever had been peculiar to each of the different kinds of being. He therefore
the middle of the world, addressed him thus: "Neither a fixed abode nor a
form that is thine alone nor any function peculiar to thyself have we given
thee, Adam, to the end that according to thy longing and according to thy
judgment thou mayest have and possess what abode, what form, and what
functions thou thyself shalt desire. The nature of all other beings is limited
and constrained within the bounds of the laws prescribed by Us. Thou, con-
strained by no limits, in accordance with thine own free will, in whose hand
We have placed thee, shall ordain for thyself the limits of thy nature. We have
set thee at the worlds center that thou mayest from thence more easily
observe whatever is in the world. We have made thee neither of heaven nor
of earth, neither mortal nor immortal, so that with freedom of choice and
with honor, as though the maker and molder of thyself, thou mayest fashion
thyself in whatever shape thou shalt prefer. Thou shalt have the power to
degenerate into the lower forms of life, which are brutish. Thou shalt have the
power, out of thy soul's judgment, to be reborn into the higher forms, which
26
SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
the banquet."^' But this theatricality did not end with the allegori-
nature of things in the heavens in cloudy and clear weather, in the plains, in
the mountains, in the woods. Hence he will seek out and get to know many
things about those who inhabit such spots. Let him have recourse to garden-
ers, husbandmen, shepherds and hunters ... for no man can possibly make all
This protean ontology was not lost on the natural sciences. The
specificity of landscape would be determined with increasing preci-
sion following the development of the new sciences of geography,
ter gardens of the medieval monasteries, gave way to the secret gar-
digenous and exotic plants. When the first public botanic garden
was created in Padua in 1545, the secret garden gave way to the pub-
lic garden. As explained by Gaetane Lamarche-Vadel,
of all the states of plants' growth, of their reactions to the seasons, climates,
27
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
and adoptive soils. Petrarch already gave himself over to such scrupulous
found cures; the eye received novel pleasures. What arrived to incite
mystery and wonder slowly gave way to knowledge and order: the
notion of the world as a closed microcosm was replaced by the con-
cept of an infinite universe, open to sensory observation and increas-
became more and more numerous, and less and less coherent with
the previously contrived system of botanic knowledge, the old cate-
ry, from the corners of the earth including all the orders: animal,
(evolving over the centuries), each epoch bore a particular ratio of the
28
SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
The notion of the deus absconditus, the hidden God, implies that no
single symbolization of God can be adequate, for God is fundamen-
tally nonrepresentable. Witness Cusanus's discussion, in De docta
names derived from particular perfections. Hence the unfolding of the divine
name is multiple, and always capable of increase, and each single name is
related to the true and ineffable name as the finite is related to the infinite.^'*
29
Hypnerotomachia PoUphili
SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
religions being rediscovered during his time, as well as with the role
of initiation in the acquisition of knowledge; indeed, he had
planned to write a book on the subject entitled Poetica theobgia. He
discerned the various formal levels of these mysteries ritualistic,
ical principle for regulating one's earthly existence. Here, the meta-
The plan of the novel, so often quoted and so little read, is to "initiate" the
soul into its own secret destiny the final union of Love and Death, for
which Hypneros (the sleeping i,ros funeraire) served as a poetic image. The way
leads through a series of bitter-sweet progressions where the very first steps
already foreshadow the ultimate mystery oi Adonia, which is the sacred mar-
tions, such that not only the marvels and miracles of the world, but
also its most commonplace objects, reveal human destiny. Needless
and art coalesce in an empirical realm that utilizes its own standards,
3^
SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
This syncretism was not lost on the arts. Though earlier hybrid
works were evident in both pastoral dramas and mystery plays, the
Monteverdi utilized all the resources of the art, ancient or new. This distinc-
tion between old and new, most honored around 1600, held little value for
him. Thus on every page one finds archaic connections of tunes, traditional
all these elements to create a moving and animated work with great lyrical
inspiration."*^
mids, obelisks, and temples, all evincing a perfection lost in the con-
representing the five senses, a queen symbolizing free will, and final-
"Poliphilus, you have already seen many singular things, but there are four
more no less singular that you must see." Then she led me to the left of the
where the queen made her residence. Around it, all along the walls, there were
cypress between two box-trees, with trunks and branches of pure gold, and
leaves of glass so perfectly imitated that they could have been taken for nat-
ural. The box-trees were topped with spheres one foot high, and the cypress-
es with points twice as high. There were also plants and flowers imitated in
glass, in many colors, forms and types, all resembling natural ones. The
planks of the cases were, as an enclosure, surrounded with slides of glass, gild-
ed and painted with beautifiil scenes. The borders were two inches wide,
trimmed with gold molding on top and bottom, and the corners were cov-
ered with small bevels of golden leaves. The garden was enclosed with pro-
34
SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
bindweed or morning glory with white flowers similar to small bells, all in
These columns rested against squared and ribbed pillars of gold, sup-
porting the arcs of the vaulting made of the same material. Underneath, it was
Upon the capitals of the protruding columns were placed the architrave, the
frieze, and the cornice in glass, figures in jasper, as well as the moldings
around it, golden rhombuses with polished and hammered foliage, such that
the rhombuses were a third as wide as the thickness of the vaulting. The
ground plan and the parterre of the garden were made of compartments
composed of knotwork and other graceftil figures, mottled with plants and
flowers of glass with the luster of precious stones. For there was nothing nat-
ural, yet there existed, nevertheless, an odor that was pleasant, fresh and fit-
ting the nature of the plants that were represented, thanks to some compound
with which they were rubbed. I long gazed upon this new sort of gardening,
we just showed him." This garden was on the other side of the palace, of the
same style and size as the one made of glass, and similar in the disposition of
its beds, except that the flowers, trees, and plants were made of silk, the col-
ors imitating those of nature. The box-trees and the cypresses were arranged
as in the preceding garden, with trunks and branches of gold, and underneath
were several simple plants of all types, so truly crafted that nature would have
taken them for her own. For the worker had artificially given them their
odors, with I know not what suitable compounds, just as in the glass garden.
The walls of this garden were made with singular skill, and at incredible cost.
They were assembled with pearls of equal size and value, upon which was
spread a stalk of ivy with leaves of silk, branches and small creeping runners
35
Hypnerotomachia Poliphili
Hypnerotomachia Poliphili
SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
of pure gold, and the corymbs or raisins of its fruit of precious stones. And,
equidistant around the wall were squared pillars, with capitols, architraves,
friezes and cornices of the same metal, resting upon it as ornaments. The
planks that served as slides were made of silk embroidered with gold thread,
depicting hunting and love scenes so surprisingly portrayed that the brush
could not have done better. The parterre was covered with green velour
three figures, square, round, and triangular. Know, Poliphilus, that these are
tion, signifying: 'the divine and infinite trinity, with a single essence.' The
and is unique and similar in all its parts. The round figure is without end or
hieroglyphs, whose property is attributed to the divine nature. The sun which,
by its beautifiil light, creates, conserves, and illuminates all things. The helm
or rudder which signifies the wise government of the universal through infi-
nite sapience. The third, which is a vase full of fire, gives us to understand a
"4
participation of love and charity communicated to us by divine goodness.
(and historic site of the Greek cult of Aphrodite): "That region was
dedicated to merciful nature, intended for the habitation and
dwelling of beatified gods and spirits."47 The description of the gar-
37
Hypnerotomachia Poliphili
SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
perfection every day. The island's river has a shore adorned with
sand mixed with gold and precious stones, and banks planted with
flowers and citrus trees. The island's major divisions are mathemat-
ically organized and separated by porphyry enclosures of artificial
shade, peony; and also aromatic and edible plants such as lettuce,
39
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
such as the unicorn cycles, are no less varied, and the parterres, plant-
overturned coupe without a foot, all of a single piece of crystal, whole and
massive, without veins, flaws, hairs, kerfs, or any macula whatsoever, purer
than the water spouting from the solid, artless, raw, unpolished rock, just as
also sometimes prefigure models of a perfection yet to come. The island where
Poliphilus ends his journey is one of those: Venus, in concert with mathe-
matical reason, conceived the plans for this garden. Fecundity is allied with
subjects, science and desire, the Apuleian weave of its mysteries and
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
is based upon the active, and not merely mimetic, aspect of vision as
a creative, dynamic, mutable process. This pertains to the garden's
visible and mathematical forms as well as to its visionary and mytho-
logical dimensions. Thus the "objective" geometry and sciences
the world, conversely, are sites that evoke reverie. The liberated plas-
Gaston Bachelard
Dematerialization
and Iconoclasm
Baroque Azure
there exists "the concept of an infinity for which there is not only a
model in God, but which is actually realized in empirical reality."^
47
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
Hshed by the garden's formal constraints: the major visual axis com-
pels the spectator to walk towards the vanishing point at the
symmetries in the landscape; at the end of the walk the extreme limit
fragility of perception.
Examination of the symbolic attributes of landscape architec-
ture may be advantageously informed by the methodology of
Robert Venturi in Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture. The
book opens with a manifesto entitled "Non-Straightforward Archi-
ness of meaning rather than the clarity of meaning; for the implicit
Consider the fact that Andre Le Notre drew the plans for his gar-
48
DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
of view (being drawn as if the eye were placed at infinity): they are
49
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
ent reasons. (In this regard it is interesting to note that, perhaps not
ble places, where death determined the articulation between the vis-
ible and the invisible. The symbolic correlates of this invisible space
revealed an iconoclasm that simultaneously stressed human mortal-
ity and vanity, and ultimately manifested the theological sublime.
The problem of the dynamism of the human body within the
"the goal was to construct the image not of a simple edifice, but of
an entire strategy."^ Comar rightly suggests that though such pro-
jections were pragmatic, since they represented the just proportions
of the objects and spaces depicted, they were far from symbolically
50
DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
morphogenesis and 'catastrophe,' "^ where "the line is vector and the
point is force. "9 Depth is experienced as the first, not the third,
dimension of lived spatiality. It creates the possibility of all possibil-
ities according to which a world takes form: a reversible spatiality
that surrounds and includes the spectator; a spatiality that maintains
librious optical line across the geometrized axis of the garden's con-
arise from corporeal presence and mobility. Thus the poetic logic of
the French formal garden is not purely visual, but synaesthetic; the
equivocations of stasis and motion, two- and three-dimensionality,
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
viewpoint and vanishing point, geometry and chaos, are all resolved
52
DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
I conjured up Sleep
To defer my awakening
While the empty black sky of night brings with it rest and dreams,
the azure daytime sky induces an extreme, vibrant energetics. A dif-
ferent contrast of darkness and light is expressed in a letter written in
sent man's two principal passions, for here black signifies hatred and
chestnut signifies love. Though the early iconography of Versailles
under Louis xrv also symbolized the king as Hercules, this was soon
surpassed by a ubiquitous solar symbolism, though the scenarization
beneath the cloudless, azure sky for, as poets, artists, and dreamers
know so well, clouds are already the prototype of images; clouds,
like smoke and fire, are among the natural sources of figuration. The
dematerializing, celestial imaginary is of the most extreme solitude,
resulting in the dissolution of matter, the erasure of images, a pure
54
DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
where the azure sky serves as the ultimate background. On the one
hand, the azure sky of Jesuit iconology designates a sacred dome, the
unclouded vault of the heavens, where mirages of holy visions gov-
ern the flight of angels, the ascent of saints, and the fall of the
damned in a celestial whirlpool of unmediated depth. On the other
hand, given the Jansenist disdain for the depiction of the sacred,
there can be no adequate representation of the deus absconditus. The
pictorial designation of God's infinitude can reveal no more than the
aesthetically and geometrically perfect vanishing point of perspecti-
val space: such would consist ofthe impossible icon ofa vanishing point
without a picture. Between the baroque and the neoclassic, between
the Jesuit and the Jansenist, the fate of miracles is tied to the apor-
with the creation of the Teatro Farnese in Parma, but already in use
in the Italian court theater of Francesco Salviati nearly fifty years
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
religious and secular festivals gave way to the unified, isotropic space
56
DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
reports of hell, the labyrinth, the kingdom of the dead, and dark
infernal night. ^^
made here of the libido vivendi, the desire to Hve, which is precisely
chaos that undermines and uproots the lives of the dramatis person-
ae. There is as of yet no common locus; interiorization is not com-
plete; the fabulous still exists apart from the personal unconscious.
This scenographic and psychological binarism is illuminated by
sites excludes a common locus of truth. ^" (It is for this reason that a
the subject anguished about death and damnation. Until the realist
and the object of ballistics in military engineering. The latter two are
In The Earth, the Temple, and the Gods, Vincent Scully explains the
Not only were certain landscapes indeed regarded by the Greeks as holy and
also that the temples and the subsidiary buildings of their sanctuaries were so
utes of each god and the symbolic aspects of the topography. Thus
the relations between landscape and architecture were fully recipro-
proportion of man. For Pascal, the visible world is but a speck with-
in a nature that is "an infinite sphere whose center is everywhere and
whose circumference is nowhere. "^^ The ubiquity of infinity, the
59
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
that all the entrances are protected from light and noise."^^ Such
excellence, off-stage.
timent that "The eternal silence of these infinite spaces fills me with
dread. "^ While La Fontaines Morpheus invites the visitor to rest-
Versailles, where the celestial trajectory of the sun follows the central
axis of the garden. Infinity penetrates the domain of Versailles; the
60
DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
sun and infinity. But this celebration of Le Roi Soleil is not without
its inherent anguish. The sun traces its path beyond the canal and
disappears "off-stage," as it were, setting at the vanishing point
evoking both the bounty of nature and the attendant anguish of the
unknown. But this would maintain a visual, representational logic.
reveals the subtly beautiful order that nature can attain in the hier-
archy of aesthetic objects, the garden cannot avoid the metaphysical
traps of symbolization. In response to the conundrum of the
Pascalian garden, Pierre Saint-Amand suggests the following:
We must imagine a garden of anguish, a garden of the weakness and misery
of the broken self, bridled by its desire for infinitude. The promenade would
6l
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
Here, where the real is not equivalent to the rational, the Pascalian
garden would be totally unrepresentable. It is an impossible site,
The woman I was following, displaying her slender waist in a movement that
mirrored the folds of her shifting taffeta dress, gracefully enwrapped the long
stem of a hollyhock wdih her bare arm, then, beneath a bright ray of light, she
began to grow, such that litde by litde the garden took on her form, the
flower-beds and the trees became the rosettes and festoons of her clothes,
whilst her face and arms imprinted their contours upon the purple clouds of
the sky. She disappeared from view in proportion to her transfiguration, for
62
DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
cide he hears voices that reveal to him the unavoidable finale that
we have already seen in La Fontaine and Pascal, one which sets the
63
A degraded paradise is perhaps worse than a degraded hell.
Robert Smithson
The Libidinal Sublime
Libertine Gardens of the
Enlightenment
/n his
his last
imprisonment
will and testament, written
at Charenton,
in 1806 during
Donatien Alphonse
Francois, Marquis de Sade (1740-1814) gave very explicit
said wood is entered from the side of the old chateau by way of the broad lane
dividing it. The ditch opened in this copse shall be dug by the farmer tenant
strewn, in order that the spot become green again, and the copse grown back
thick over it, the traces of my grave may disappear from the face of the earth
as I trust the memory of me shall fade out of the minds of all men save nev-
ertheless for those few who in their goodness have loved me until the last and
Coming from the author of The 120 Days of Sodom (1784), Justine
Richard A. Etlin traces the history of the shift: from the ideals and
65
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
sentimental visits to the tomb of the beloved arose; this inspired, for
(>(>
THE LIBIDINAL SUBLIME
Rousseau (Nature). With the last column dedicated to Rousseau, this unfin-
rary landscape.
and practically. On the one hand, it served as a model for works such
as Christian Hirschfeld's Theorie de I'art des jardins (1779-85), Abbe
Delille's influential poem, Les Jardins (1782), and Bernardin de Saint-
of these works:
All three authors shared a common conviction about the moral force of the
pastoral and elegiac landscape garden. None of them coiJd tolerate thejardin
kiosks and bridges, Gothic ruins, Turkish tents, Egyptian obelisks, and assort-
ed tombs. Delille explicidy condemned gardens that assembled the "four cor-
"4
ners of the world into one park.
both visual and poetic unification. And yet, another sort of hetero-
In the cemetery individual tastes and caprice would ensure variety. In a na-
tional Elysium, one had to legislate against the ever-present threat of visual
67
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
and domes." The tombs and mausoleums would be fashioned from stones of
all colors so that they would not seem to have come from the same quarry.'
penciled in 1813 a telling poem that concluded with the line, "For
landscapes, where the originary sin of Adam and Eve that led to
human mortality would be infinitely repeated in the most extreme
libertine scenarios. For the great French parks of the eighteenth cen-
tury, while providing the sites for tombs and monuments, were also
settings for the follies and pleasure houses of the aristocracy, the
It was hardly an English garden that one was hoping to create at Monceau,
but exacdy what it was being criticized for, the uniting in one garden of all
times and places. It is a simple fantasy, the desire to have an extraordinary gar-
land of illusions, why not do so, since only illusions amuse ... we should bring
the changing scenes of opera into our gardens, letting us see, in reality, what
the most accomplished painters offer on canvas all periods and places.
68
THE LIBIDINAL SUBLIME
ness It has been said that in order for a ruin to appear beautiful, the act of
69
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
However, as one can speak of ruins and not of heaps of stone, nature does not
permit the work to fall into an amorphous state of raw matter; a new form is
sible, differentiated. Nature has made of the artwork the matter of its cre-
should be noted that upon his death in 1814, Sade's will was not
respected, since the estate of Malmaison had been sold four years
Petrarch's passion for Laura was the most extreme and perfect
not at all altered the glow of her charms, and her eyes still retained as much
fire as when Petrarch glorified them. She was entirely shrouded in black satin,
upon which her beautiful blond hair loosely floated. It seemed that love, in
order to render her even more beautifiil, wished to soften the lugubrious attire
in which she offered herself to my eyes. "Why do you lament your fate?" she
asked. "Come join me. There is no more suffering, no more sorrow, no more
discord in the vast space I inhabit. Have the courage to follow me.""
gia for love, unrequited or otherwise, that this prisoner would dream
his freedom. Rather, in a gesture that reaches the limits of the liter-
adorned his prison walls.'^ Here the spectacular, rich, fertile land-
Pietramala:
advances, the excessive heat and the odor of carbon and charcoal that it
exhales is felt for more than a hundred steps around. Coming closer, one sees
the hearth that perpetually burns, with all the more ardor when it rains. This
heanh is presendy open for only about fifteen or twenty paces around. But
71
Chateau de Sade, La Coste
THE LIBIDINAL SUBLIME
confirmed by digging into the earth to the extent I mention. As one excavates
within this circle, fire appears and seems to light up under the very instru-
ment used for digging. The earth at the middle of the hearth is baked, burnt
out, and black. That around it, though still within the volcano, is like clay,
with a certain moistness that makes it possible to shape it as one wishes. It has
the same odor as the volcano, which is not the case for that which is already
burnt. The flame that comes out of the hearth is extremely ardent; it instan-
taneously burns and consumes everything thrown into it. It is violet in color
Later during his voyage he visited the volcano of Solfatare, and final-
We climbed for two hours, of which the second part was the most difficult.
For the last quarter hour the sand was very hot. A hundred steps before arriv-
ing one discovers a large number of small mouths of smoke that give the air
and the atmosphere an unbearable taste of sulfur. The entire surface of the
funnel or flange of the ancient mouth is fiill of sulfur and saltpeter; the little
valley formed by the accretions of the new mouth or new mountain is con-
siderable. One first descends into this litde valley and then ascends on the
flange of the little mountain, from which one then looks straight into all the
horror of the terrifying abyss that serves as reservoir for the hearth. A fright-
ful noise arises from there, smoke of considerable thickness issues forth, and
from time to time thick flames shoot out with great force and throw forth
of Tuscany begin with Pietramala, and it is upon this evil stone that Sadian
philosophy is built.'^
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
ture her:
her bound hands and feet, carried her to the brink, and let her fall. Down
she went into the volcano, and for several minutes we listened to the sounds
of her body crashing from ledge to ledge, being torn by the sharp outcrop-
ping rocks: gradually the sounds subsided, and then we heard nothing
more. '7
that which underlies the inherent power of the sublime, the anxiety
related to mortality; all pretense to higher values is consequently
undercut. Clairwil, perpetrator of this crime, then exclaims, "Well,
I say, if what we have done is a true outrage to Nature, then let her
avenge herself, for she can if she wishes; let an eruption occur, let
lava boil up from that inferno down there, let a cataclysm snuff out
our lives this very instant."'^ Indeed, Sade had always imagined the
possibility of an apocalyptic eruption of Vesuvius, one that would
bury the entirety of Naples in molten lava and black ash, trans-
the ultimate crime, to attack the sun, either to deprive the world of
74
THE LIBIDINAL SUBLIME
The primary and most beautiful of Nature's qualities is motion, which agi-
tates her at all times, but this motion is simply a perpetual consequence of
crimes, she conserves it by means of crimes only; the person who most near-
ly resembles her, and therefore the most perfect being, necessarily will be the
one whose most active agitation will become the cause of many crimes.
fore, crimes serve Nature; if they serve her, if she demands them, if she desires
them, can they offend her? And who else can be offended if she is not?^
fying expression; even the Hbertine's most wanton deeds are justified,
He will observe with what great care they had chosen a remote and isolat-
75
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
with such conviction that Sade's name became synonymous with the
perversion of sexual cruelty. How, then, could such hyperbolically
rant, and abnormal stagings in the theater of desire, where the trau-
mas, enigmas, and joys of sexuality are abreacted and narrated. Such
mutability would seem to be antithetical to the inherent solidity of
lows step by step the path of, 'a pain that, to the extent that it
The weather that evening was fauhless; we were beneath a bower of roses
with Hiac bushes all around us; a multitude of candles furnished the light,
our seats were three thrones supported on artificial clouds whence came the
scent of the most delicious perfumes; in the center of the table was a very
mountain of the rarest flowers, set amongst which were the jade and porce-
lain cups and plates we were to drink from and dine off; the service was of
gold. No sooner had we taken our places than the bower opened overhead
76
THE LIBIDINAL SUBLIME
and before our eyes there descended a fiery cloud: upon it, the Three Furies
and, imprisoned in the coils of their serpents, the three victims destined to
tatious display that Louis xiv built Versailles, but for love, which is
also majestic, with its hiding places of trimmed hedges, its prome-
nades in grottos, and its insane population of statues."^^ The literary
site, while the plot utilized the garden as both background for
events and symbolic space. The codes of gallantry were regulated by
77
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
bordered on the west by the Sea of Enmity, on the east by the Lake
of Indifference, and on the north by the Dangerous Sea separating
it from the Unknown Lands of passionate love. The voyager may
travel to three cities: Love by Esteem, Love by Inclination, and Love
by Gratitude; the routes are varied, and one may pass, for example,
from New Friendship to Complacency, Submission, Little
by Esteem; or, to the contrary, one may travel through the distress-
and this added brilliance made the salon seem larger and restated the
78
THE LIBIDINAL SUBLIME
cealed by carefully sculpted, leafy tree trunks. The trees, arranged to give the
illusion of a quincunx, were heavy with flowers and laden with chandeliers.
The light from their many candles receded into the opposite mirrors, which
had been purposely veiled with hanging gauze. So magical was this optical
eflFect that the boudoir could have been mistaken for a natural woods, lit with
thehelpofart.^9
strict sense of the term: it proffers but one fantasy, one narrative, one
architecture, one seduction.
In contradistinction, Anthony Vidler suggests that in both
79
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
ed, into which the libertines lead their victims, from which screams
are heard, and of which no tales are told. These invisible, dark,
things erotic have their place: Eros exists as the aporia between the
sures of the senses; it does not respect mores, but it does not pretend
to defy them: it is without delicacy and justifies its choices only by
tem, which in turn permits and organizes the speech that gives rise
Barthes concludes that the Sadian city, the Chateau of Silling, is "the
that any valid metaphysics must attempt, and one that Sade accom-
plished in so awe-inspiring a manner is crucial. Erotic Utopias
ill with violent fever; the illness worsened in the weeks to follow, and
she suffered greatly, referring to her agony as a "flowery corrida." She
ascent of Aetna, and felt suddenly overwhelmed. Everything was just as black
and as subtly inftised with terror as on that night when Laure and I climbed
Aetna's slopes Arriving at dawn on the crest of the vast, bottomless crater
we were exhausted, with our eyes almost starting out of their sockets in a soli-
tude too strange, too catastrophic. There was that shattering moment when
we leaned over the gaping wound, the crack in that star on which we drew
breath.'^
82
/ confess that I am partial to these wild fancies, which transcend the
Night. Here was no man's garden, but the unhandseled globe. It was not
lawn, nor pasture, nor mead, nor woodland, nor lea, nor arable, nor waste-
land. It was the fresh and natural surface of the planet Earth, as it was made
I saw the fences half consumed, their ends lost in the middle of the prairie,
and some worldly miser with a surveyor looking after his bounds, while heav-
en had taken place around him, and he did not see the angels going to and
fro, but was looking for an old post-hole in the midst of paradise. I looked
again, and saw him standing in the middle of a boggy Stygian fen, surround-
ed by devils, and he had found his bounds without a doubt, three little stones,
where a stake had been driven, and looking nearer, I saw that the Prince of
Of going somewhere?
The poem suggests that every direction is of equal value, since it
Adirondacks, and the Maine woods suggest that the natural settings
of the East Coast offered sufficient scenarios to support his tran-
scendental philosophical values, it was in fact towards another nat-
distant and as fair as that into which the sun goes down. He appears to
86
NO MANS GARDEN
migrate westward daily, and tempt us to follow him. He is the Great Western
Pioneer whom the nations follow. We dream all night of those mountain-
ridges in the horizon, though they may be of vapor only, which were last gild-
ed by his rays. The island of Adantis, and the islands and gardens of the
Hesperides, a sort of terrestrial paradise, appear to have been the Great West
of the ancients, enveloped in mystery and poetry. Who has not seen in imag-
ination, when looking into the sunset sky, the gardens of the Hesperides, and
sized the West at the last historic moment that it evoked wonder and
signified the unknown in European and American thought; the
hyperbole in which the West was rhetorically and poetically figured
symbolized a form of the imagination that had very definite practi-
cal effects on its representation and the struggle for its preservation.
and history; it was the West, to the contrary, that offered the pure
I trust that we shall be more imaginative, that our thoughts will be clearer,
fresher, and more ethereal, as our sky, our understanding more comprehen-
sive and broader, like our plains, our intellect generally on a grander scale,
like our thunder and lightening, our rivers and mountains and forests, and
our hearts shall even correspond in breadth and depth and grandeur to our
inland seas.^
his sense of nature: his ideal was the poets who "nailed words to their
primitive senses" and for whom "words were so true and fresh and
natural that they would appear to expand like the buds at the
87
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
always already paradise lost, and that it can only be regained in spir-
it, or more precisely in writing, and not in any worldly site. For
example, the complexity and ambivalence of Thoreau's reaction to
the railroad is evident in the following citation, where in an
extreme example of mixed metaphor the locomotive is simultane-
ously allegorized in cosmological, meteorological, mythological,
motion, or, rather, Hke a comet, for the beholder knows not if with that
velocity and with that direction it will ever revisit this system, since its orbit
does not look like a returning curve, with ip steam cloud like a banner
streaming behind in golden and silver wreaths, like many a downy cloud
which I have seen, high in the heavens, unfolding its masses to the light, as
if this travelling demi-god, this cloud-compeller, would ere long take the sun-
set sky for the livery of his train; when I hear the iron horse make the hills
echo with his snort like thunder, shaking the earth with his feet, and breath-
ing fire and smoke from his nostrils (what kind of winged horse or fiery drag-
on they will put into the new Mythology I don't know), it seems as if the earth
wrote of the railroad, which passed quite close to his idyllic Walden
Pond, "We have constructed a fate, an Atropos, that never turns
aside."^
The first American railway system was built in 1829, and its devel-
ing the paradigm of the vast scale of nature upon which the National
Much of the singular quality of this era is conveyed by the trope of the inter-
rupted idyll. The locomotive, associated with fire, smoke, speed, iron, and
noise, is the leading symbol of the new industrial power. It appears in the
woods, suddenly shattering the harmony of the green hollow, like a presenti-
89
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
streaks, of red or white; there are no longer any points, everything becomes a
streak; the grain fields are great shocks of yellow hair; fields of alfalfa, long
green tresses; the towns, the steeples, and the trees perform a crazy mingling
dance on the horizon; from time to time, a shadow, a shape, a specter appears
"'^
and disappears with lightening speed behind a window: it's a railway guard.
90
NO MANS GARDEN
increased speed of travel the observer is cut off from the observed
In a few hours, it shows you all of France, and before your eyes it unrolls its
Of a landscape it shows you only the great outlines, being an artist versed in
the ways of the masters. Don't ask it for details, but for the living whole. '^
anxiety about the loss of the natural, so too does every such increase
ized" landscape.
9i
NO MANS GARDEN
the scene into a private, transitory image. John Dixon Hunt dis-
Similarly, in one of William Gilpin's accounts of using his mirror, not while
stationary, but while riding in his chaise, we learn that its images "are like
colours in brightest array, fleet before us; and if the transient glance of a good
composition happen to unite with them, we should give any price to fix and
appropriate the scene." Cognitive and creative processes seem to unite there,
exemplifying the sense, which Martin Price drew to our attention in the pic-
turesque moment, of play between "the need for reasonable common truths"
tions." Because of their rapid passage across the glass in this instance, the
sonable common truths" did not yet include those experienced dur-
ing the epoch of greatly increased speed of the railway journey, and
the desire to "fix and appropriate the scene" was not yet realizable
through photography. Yet the use of the glass as frame offered the
requisite "objectivity" to capture the "arbitrary structures and the
accidental associations" that were so crucial to the constitution of
93
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
in the light of to-day, and saw the steamboats wooding up, counted
the rising cities."'^ His description is interesting not only as yet
painting in panorama from a framed painting. In the latter, one only sees the
portion of the horizon line included in the angle of vision, and there is only
one point of view. In the panorama, whose surface is circular, one works from
one angle of vision to another, and consequently from one point of view to
another. To the extent that the spectators gaze moves from one side to the
ly submitted to the optical phenomena that appertain to each angle of vision. "^
painters at least since Leonardo da Vinci), does not permit any ame-
lioration of the view as the spectator approaches the panorama.
Whence the spatial "hybridization of the gaze," whereby the hetero-
94
NO MANS GARDEN
mobility of vision.
Thoreau's vicarious panoramic experience of the Mississippi
was, in any case, epistemologically anachronistic, since the age of the
new aesthetics ("I love to dream through these placid beauties whilst
95
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
lOO miles north of New York City, parallel to, though not in sight
of, the Hudson River recently had its panoramic rest stops closed,
of the distant views of the scenery. In the case of the Taconic State
Parkway, the captured view is that of the Hudson River Valley, made
famous through the school of painting that bears its name.
Increase in speed transforms the relationship between percep-
struggled with the increasing speeds of train travel; the early twenti-
thresholds.^7
I must walk towards Oregon, and not towards Europe. The Adantic is a
Lethean stream, in our passage over which we have had an opportunity to for-
get the Old World and its institutions. If we do not succeed this time, there is
96
NO MANS GARDEN
perhaps one more chance for the race left before it arrives on the banks of the
Styx; and that is in the Lethe of the Pacific, which is three times as wide.^^
speak is but another name for the Wild; and what I have been
preparing to say is, that in Wildness is the preservation of the
World."^9 This West, this Wild, is ideal; its scale, grandeur, and
fresher, the cold is intenser, the moon looks larger, the stars are brighter, the
thunder is louder, the lightening is vivider, the wind is stronger, the rain is
heavier, the mountains are higher, the rivers longer, the forests bigger, the
plains broader.'
Bleu, and it was left to the gardens themselves to inspire the artists
and poets who hiked through this relatively tame nature. It is iron-
97
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
rather than areas of France that were minimally settled and aesthet-
popular imagination.
This attitude is explained by Renaud Camus in Le Departe-
ment de la Lozere, where he reminds us that in the late nineteenth
98
NO MANS GARDEN
the primitive, the libidinal, and the anarchic, thus to justify the exer-
levels. Crucial in this regard was the fact that the American land-
tendentious either one alone might have been, and however few
people realized the implicit equivocations that often entered into
such descriptions.
If America seemed to promise everything that men always had wanted, it also
threatened to obliterate much of what they already had achieved. The para-
the nineteenth century our best writers were able to develop the theme in all
its complexity. Not that the conflict was in any sense peculiar to American
experience. It had always been at the heart of pastoral; but the discovery of
the New World invested it with new relevance, with fresh symbols.''
is stated towards the end of the book, "A Garden is no where soon-
er made than there, either for Fruits, or Flowers And yet, they
99
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
between the primitive and the pastoral ideals. "^^ Beverley's soul in
much literature claims. "But the physical attributes of the land are
less important than its metaphoric powers. What finally matters
given his own deep relationship with the vast wilderness of the
boundless and infinite, the creation of the first National Parks, how-
ever large in relation to European gardens and game preserves, nec-
essarily belied this fantasy. Furthermore, it was not only the natural-
ists and transcendentalists who shared Muir's concerns. Frederick
Law Olmsted, the great American landscape architect of the nine-
England (1852), was not a naturalist: he was best known for inte-
that today the park consists of approximately 1,200 square miles (as
opposed to the 6.3 square miles that constitute the present reserve of
the Forest of Fontainebleau, established in 1953). To conceive of
Yosemite in the context of the history of Occidental landscape archi-
tecture, albeit it in a mode of minimalist intervention, is to radical-
ly alter that history. Here, the beautiful and the sublime are exalted
There was a time when the American West was largely unrepresent-
as if, with all the materials for world-making assembled, the Creator had
desisted, gone away and left everything on the point of being brought togeth-
er, on the eve of being arranged into mountain, plain, plateau. The country
began afi:er 1830, when the Rocky Mountains became an icon for the
103
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
explorations of the Grand Canyon area. His subsequent painting, The Chasm
owed much to photography. Moran and Hillers worked closely together. But
the Grand Canyon posed a problem for both painters and photographers. As
anyone who has ever tried to photograph it will know, its sheer size resists
being captured within the frame, however large. Despite his claims of geo-
sky, suggesting the vast distances of the scene by obscuring the detail in haze.
representation, since, inevitably, the furthest parts of the view became dif-
fused. Perhaps the most telling photographic view of the canyon is one by
Jackson, dating from considerably later and made in 1892, which surrenders
to the inevitable blurring of distance and makes the focus of the picture the
evident in the fact that, as Buscombe mentions, the first white men
ro4
NO MANS GARDEN
saw the Grand Canyon as early as 1540, but were not particularly
impressed, probably because they were unable to fit the spectacular
March 1842 that sums up the various aspects of the present discus-
we see things in growth or dissolution, in life or death. For seen with the eye
of the poet, as God sees them, all things are alive and beautiful; but seen with
the historical eye, or eye of the memory, they are dead and offensive. If we see
Nature as pausing, immediately all mortifies and decays; but seen as pro-
only the moral or human point of view. Each alteration of the natural scenery
may possibly effect a blemish in the picture, if we can suppose this picture
viewed at large in mass from some point distant from the earth's surface,
105
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
although not beyond the limits of its atmosphere. It is easily understood that
what might improve a closely scrutinized detail, may at the same time injure
ings, human once, but now invisible to humanity, to whom, from afar, our
eanh-angels, for whose scrutiny more especially than our own, and for whose
io6
NO MANS GARDEN
107
The certainty of the absolute garden will never be regained.
Robert Smithson
In Praise ofAnachronism
Garden as Gesamtkunstwerk
^^^^^^ were hardly changed: they are, for the most part,
excluded from the art historical and aesthetic canons. A case in point
that exemplifies this problem, as well as provides the opportunity to
text, briefly stated, illustrates how during the rise of sculptural min-
imalism towards the end of the modernist epoch certain works were
produced precisely to contest and expand the traditionally consti-
[09
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
imagine an opposite term one thiat would be both landscape and architec-
ture which within this schema is called the complex. But to think the com-
plex is to admit into the realm of art two terms that had formerly been pro-
from what might be called the closure of post-Renaissance art. Our culture
had not before been able to think the complex, although other cultures have
thought this term with great ease. Labyrinths and mazes are both landscape
it can be presumed that what are referred to are "dry" or Zen gar-
dens, since to Western eyes they are particularly esoteric, sculptur-
tures. "^ These are, therefore, the most "sculptural" of all landscapes,
the schema itself. This is even tacitly suggested in the title of Krauss s
value of the "expanded field" for its literal equivalent, the "field," in
ical ground. The physical existence of the expanded field would thus
be equivalent to the garden.
To thus "ground" the expanded field would be to place the gar-
its potential role as the unstated site of heterogeneity itself, as the syn-
not only for sculpture but for the other arts as well. Such a Gesamt-
Every epoch since the baroque has elaborated the dream of a total
If architecture and, still more so, scenic landscape painting can place the dra-
matic actor in the natural environment of the physical world and give him,
rich and relevant, the orchestra . . . offers the individual actor, as a support,
what may be called a perpetual source of the natural element of man as artist.
The orchestra is, so to speak, the soil of infinite universal feeling from which
the individual feeling of the single actor springs into full bloom; it somehow
dissolves the solid motionless floor of the actual scene into a fluid, pliant,
ment in general:
I believe that from that Earth emerges a musical poetry, which is by the nature
remote from their basic origins, but which can be strikingly expressive as long
Nothing less could have been expected in the context of the court of
Louis XIV, Le Grand Louis, Le Rot Soleil. Versailles as a unique work
of art is indicated by the series of texts written by Louis xrv as guides
114
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
and divine right. Here, the works of the epoch's greatest artists, such
as Jean-Baptiste Lully, Jean-Baptiste MoUere, and PhiUppe Quinault,
were performed, and the king himself took center stage, both figu-
than the sum of its sensory, sensual, symbolic, and historic parts. It
the canal, a torrent of fire from which arose a thick cloud of smoke that, while
being quite terrible, also revealed its own beauties. For, from its huge red and
bluish clouds like those seen during great storms, there emerged a thousand
in the air, some snaking from one place to another, some first rising, to then
115
Les Buttes-Chaumont: belvedere, forest, and "suicide bridge"
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
plunge into the water, and all creating a thousand different effects. An infi-
canal, during which time the dragon vomited forth such a huge quantity that
his muzzle seemed a chasm from which emerged a thousand enflamed sprites
playing or battling together. The entirety of the water was covered by the fire-
works that shot forth to the end of the canal and, after having meandered
either on the surface of or in between the two pieces of water, they rose in lit-
tle whirlwinds of fire and, making a thousand turns in the air, they burst with
a terrifying noise, producing at the same time an infinitude of other fires cre-
ating new effects. Everything that could be seen within the great extent of
more than three hundred fathoms was neither fire nor air nor water. These
'
an infinitude of atoms of gold, sparkled amidst an ever greater light.
waterfall, not unlike those of the Jura that offered Gustave Courbet
some of his most famous subjects; a somber, miniature evergreen
117
VHlandry: vegetable garden
Chaumont Park, of which he was the designer [after Alphand and Barillet-
best piece of artificial planting of its age, I have ever seen." He smiled and
offenses and of imaginary spasms. "^^ Rarely were the surrealists more
in tune with baroque and classic emotions, and rarely did popular
urban geography correspond so closely to the aspirations of avant-
garde poetics.
119
Villandry: alley
claim equally true of its gardens) as a site that synthesizes the histo-
excellents bdtiments de France (1576) was the direct source for the
parterre patterns in the vegetable and decorative gardens; the Arab
and Andalusian traditions (including the representation of gardens in
tleman who said to his king, at the moment when such gardens
became fashionable: "Sire, your gardens are extremely easy to make.
It suffices to get the gardener drunk and to follow him. "'5 Xhe
French formal garden received no better estimation: "The gardens of
Louis XIV are a beautifiil cemetery."'^ To the contrary, Carvallo cher-
ished the vegetable garden of King Francois i at Blois, also in the
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
The vegetables, particularly those arriving after the end of July, change color
as they develop. Thus the "Green Tomato" becomes brilliant yellow, then
bright red. A row of tomatoes, carefully topped oflFand thinned out, is a ver-
itable work of art, since each tomato appears, upon a very beautiftil green, like
then bluish, and finally sumptuously red: "Veronese red." . . . The celery has a
surprisingly Empire green color. . . . The light green leek darkens with age, and
ends in the colors of ancient tapestries laced with silver threads The hum-
ble beet goes from glaucous green to Bordeaux red spangled with ochre and
earth. No Christian Dior dress is made, if I dare say so, with as sumptuously
varied colors.'^
and otherwise of the genius loci. The debate is typical of the avant-
more than mimic the forms and effects of either historic gardens or
the historic avant-garde, and thus offer litde to the debates that must
inform contemporary transformations of landscape architecture.
These include the works of Roberto Burle Marx in South America,
whose ground plans and use of color bear features in common with
in 1926 by Andre and Paul Vera, which may be considered the ulti-
123
Erik Samakh, Pierre sonore (ippi)
rock sits on volcanic ash in a dark room (recalling certain Zen gar-
dens), and frog- and cricket-like sounds heard from outside the
room diminish as the spectator enters and approaches the rock.
125
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
oeuvre, which thereby accords the site exceptional status and atten-
investigated: the use of glass in the landscape not glass that deco-
case that we both see and see according to a work of art, if the garden
is both artwork and site, then the use of glass, with its variable and
alternating transparency and reflectivity, offers an appropriate alle-
1x6
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
For cuisine, among the most concrete arts, eschews mimesis, as does
century cuisine inflect the history of French haute cuisine well into
the twentieth century. To place the modernist conditions of cuisine
thetic avant-garde.
127
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
of two arts that have only recently received their muses: landscape
architecture and cuisine. For while such a garden of spun glass might
never actually have been constructed, the history of cuisine attests to
its influence in the fabulous inventions of pieces montees of spun
sugar, pastry, and candy that evoke such fragile fantasy worlds.
foot of each tower. Every animal was highly decorated and spat fire;
these included a huge gilded boar ornamented with the guests' coats
of arms, a suckling pig, and a roast swan replumed with its own
feathers. The piece de resistance was a huge pike cooked in three
manners the tail end fried, the middle boiled, and the head
roast served with three different sauces.^' Both this dish and the
flamboyant totality. Here, the taste for miracles and marvels was
pect that such curiosities, mirabile dictu, often far surpassed the plea-
The visual aspect o^z piece montee often takes precedence over
might seem regarding the gustatory goals of cuisine, such that sym-
bolic-value supersedes use-value. Indeed, Careme's decorative per-
128
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
for landscape architecture per se: "I would have ceased being a pas-
cism linked to the effects of the purely picturesque; there was no allu-
and Le Pdtissier royal parisien (1815), where it is evident that his inspi-
[29
Antonin Careme, Athenian Ruin, from Le Patissier pittoresque
[N PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
that would represent rivers, cascades, and waves of the sea. The
131
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
architecture and pastry, and stressing an inexorable desire "to eat the
object of desire. "^4 in describing two art nouveau houses that
Antonio Gaudi designed on the Paseo de Gracia in Barcelona, he
explains how one was inspired by the ocean's waves during a tempest,
emerge forms of still water, forms of spreading water, forms of stagnant water,
forms of mirroring water, forms of water rippling in the wind, all these forms of
gences, thick protuberances of fear gushing from the incredible facade, simul-
ly tender calmness whose only equals are those horrifying apotheoses and ripe
132
[N PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
restaurant Michel Bras, named for its chef and owner and situated
near the remote town of Laguiole in the Aubrac region of Frances
Massif Central. One of Brass signature dishes is the gargouillou,
Bras}'^ The term evokes the verb gargouiller, the bubbling or gur-
Proven9al other.
claim that "the summits of the art are attained precisely in those
periods when the refinement of recipes associates a complexity of
located four miles outside of Laguiole. The Aubrac ^with its vast,
is enclosed in glass walls that expectedly open upon the splendid vis-
tas, but the long, rectangular, glass-walled restaurant offers what is
one of the hotel buildings, letting only the sky appear. Between the
windows of the restaurant and the initially exasperating wall is a nar-
row rectangular garden that runs the length of the restaurant, open
at the northern end to visually flow into the countryside. Looking
obliquely northward, from inside this garden, its unmarked extrem-
ity is continuous with the landscape beyond; looking straight west-
ward from within the restaurant, the garden is framed by the win-
dows and delimited by the wall. This garden is stylistically equivocal,
not unlike many of Brass dishes: its several rugged stones placed as
135
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
soften its effect. But as the sun reaches the horizon, the waiters, in
choreographed synchroniciry, raise the shades, revealing the
pheric conditions and the double plate glass of the windows. The
symbolic, indeed metaphysical, role of the sun has played a major
Versailles, where the garden's central axis marks the solar trajectory,
culminating at the vanishing point where the sun sets at infinity, all
136
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
the eye, it proposes a much closer space, centered on the body. Hence one
world beyond the far edge of the table. Instead of a zone beyond one finds
a blank, vertical wall, sometimes coinciding with a real wall, but no less per-
suasively it is a virtual wall That further zone beyond the table's edge
must be suppressed if still life is to create its principal spatial value: nearness.
What builds this proximal space is gesture: the gestures of eating, of laying
the table.4
culinary riches.
point for the very same reasons that the minimalist sculpture and
earthworks of the late 1960s and early 1970s belied formal analyses.
The material existence of Olivier's equivocal (though not too anx-
exit, viewpoint and vanishing point, seer and seen. Here, the subtle
and cunning reversibility of space infinite overture and transcen-
dent permeability receives its aesthetic consecration. Is the spec-
[37
Henri Olivier,. Untitled
becomes fluid and ephemeral, as is often the case for garden sculp-
tionships between site, sight, and sign in the landscape are compli-
the site where memory and history intersect, where scripted theater
and spontaneous eroticism are juxtaposed, where the simulacrum of
an ideal world and the exigencies of the real conflict. Here, Olivier's
For both Finlay and Olivier, garden and sculpture exist in a site-spe-
[39
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
images are beheld. All sculpture might well aspire to the ontological
condition of Mount Fuji.
Yet now, this aesthetic situation is complicated insofar as at the
Compare Thoreau's vision of the "worldly miser," who "did not see
the angels going to and fro, but was looking for an old post-hole
in the midst of paradise. "4^ Premodernist paradigms of landscape
would focus on the hill in Tennessee or the image of paradise, val-
rior and exterior, nature and artifact, axiom and object, landscape
141
Bauduin, Vers Versailles
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
testimony nameswhereby an
that object is set in the landscape,
between the Fountain of Apollo and the canal, afterwards at the gar-
den's extreme limit at the end of the canal, and then at three sculp-
stake, following the east- west axis of the garden that structurally reg-
ulates the major viewpoints. One deposition offered views over the
canal to the vanishing point, and over the Fountain of Apollo to the
t43
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
and a visible work, both a gesture and an object multiplying the gar-
den's signification and enriching its visibility.
Are the "icons" of this work the canal and pool, or rather the
variously transparent and reflecting sheet of glass? Both, it would
seem, as this is an art of process and instability, ellipsis and equivo-
cation, allusion and conception based on the rapid passage through
a landscape. For Bauduin, to saunter is to abandon; his depositions
You know, one pebble moving one foot in two million years is enough action
the action. Sometimes we have to call on Bacchus. Excess. Madness. The End
ly glowing sun, and suggested the sullen dissolution of entire continents, the
drying up of oceans no longer were there green forests and high moun-
tains all that existed were millions of grains of sand, a vast deposit of bones
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
and stones pulverized into dust. Every grain of sand was a dead metaphor and
through the false mirror of eternity. This sand box somehow doubled as an
material substructure of the art object, one might wonder why, of all
the arts, landscape architecture should hardly have benefited from
"He was always troubled by those actual scale problems, and then
the whole idea of probability springs out of that. "4^ Pascal's theo-
145
Robert Smithson, Sixth Yucatan Mirror Displacement (ipdp)
1
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
approached, but time is far away. Time is devoid of objects when one dis-
places all destinations. The car kept going on the same horizon. ^^^
time The Tree of Rocks. (A memo for a possible "earthwork" balance slabs
of rock in tree limbs.) But if one wishes to be ingenious enough to erase time
both the vanishing point at infinity and the setting sun, Apollonian
tools into stable icons. Writing of the flight over the jungle towards
the site of the sixth mirror displacement, he offered a description
that is not only emblematic of the Yucatan project and of his entire
oeuvre, but also of the aesthetics of post-baroque gardens: "Down
in the lagoons and swamps one could see infinite, isotropic, three-
If you visit the sites (a doubtful probability) you find nothing but memory
traces, for the mirror displacements were dismantled right after they were
photographed. The mirrors are somewhere in New York. The reflected light
has been erased. Remembrances are but numbers on a map, vacant memories
seen. The fictive voices of the totems have exhausted their arguments. Yucatan
is elsewhere. 55
149
Robert Smithsoii, Map of Broken Clear Glass (Atlantis), (1969)
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
abstraction, in the root sense of the term, that expands the limits of
ofBroken Glass; Map of Clear Broken Glass Strips (Atlantis); and Map
of Glass (Atlantis). Some exist in the form of maps and drawings,
others were actually completed works, all were "anti-expeditions,"
like that in the Yucatan, which thrust landscape architecture into the
his apocalyptic short story, "The Illuminated Man," where the trans-
By day fantastic birds flew through the petrified forest, and jeweled alHgators
night the illuminated man raced among the trees, his arms like golden cart-
'^
wheels, his head like a spectral crown.
UNNATURAL HORIZONS
aclysmic transformation
"in this forest everything is transfigured
recounts:
Again the forest was a place of rainbows, the deep carmine light glowing from
the jeweled grottos. I walked along a narrow road which wound towards a
great white house standing like a classical pavilion on a rise in the centre of
^
spilling from the wide roof which overtopped the forest.
imagination:
The dream worlds invented by the writer of fantasy are external equivalents
of the inner world of the psyche, and because these symbols take their impe-
tus from the most formative and confused periods of our lives they are often
152
IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
Smithson foresaw that "At any rate, the 'pastoral,' it seems, is out-
153
Notes
Unless otherwise noted, English translations of French texts are by Allen S. Weiss.
desprodiges (Paris: L'Harmattan, 1997), 48. This book is an excellent study of the
secret garden, from the medieval hortiis conclusus through the Italian Renaissance
temporary Civilization in the U^if (New York: Columbia University Press, 1965), 557.
5 Ibid., 560.
Baltru^aitis, Le moyen dge fantastique: Antiquites et exotismes dans I'art gothique (1955;
Paris: Flammarion, 1981); and Rudolf Wittkower, Allegory and the Migration of
Symbols (London: Thames and Hudson, 1977).
9 Ernst Cassirer, The Individual and the Cosmos in Renaissance Philosophy, trans.
Mario Domandi (1927; Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1972), 52.
10 Ibid., 143.
11 As this is probably the most analyzed topic in art history, a long list of references
several classic texts: John White, The Birth and Rebirth of Pictorial Space (London:
Faber & Faber, 1957); Pierre Francastel, La figure et le lieu: L'ordre visuel du
Rediscovery of Linear Perspective (New York: Harper & Row, 1975); and Hubert
Damisch, L'origine de la perspective {Vaus: Flammarion, 1987).
12 The most recent translation is Leon Battista AJberti, On the Art of Building in Ten
Books, trans. Joseph Rykwert, Neil Leach, Robert Tavernow (Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 1996).
13 For example, the Villa Lante (Bagnaia), the Villa d'Este (Tivoli), the Boboli
Gardens of the Palazzo Pitti (Florence), and the various Medici Villas (Rome,
Castello, Poggio, Pratolino, and Fiesole), only to name some of the most typical
and famous.
14 The literature on the Italian Renaissance garden is vast. For a fine introduction, see
Catherine Laroze, Une histoire sensuelle des jardins (Paris: Olivier Orban, 1990),
32332; Terry Comito, "The Humanist Garden," in Monique Mosser and Georges
Teyssot, eds. The Architecture of Western Gardens (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,
1991), 37-45; and John Dixon Hunt, Garden and Grove (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1986), especially 42-58 ("Ovid in the Garden") and 59-72
("Garden and Theatre"). Among the many fine illustrated books and guides, very
usefiil is Judith Chatfield, A Tour ofItalian Gardens (New York: Rizzoli, 1988).
16 This section on Cusanus is based on Cassirer, Individual and Cosmos. On the great
chain of being, see Arthur O. Lovejoy, The Great Chain of Being {\9i6; New York:
Harper & Row, i960).
17 Karl Jaspers, Anselm and Nicholas ofCusa, trans. Ralph Mannheim (New York:
Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1966), 35. Needless to say, the present essay presents
19 Cited in Raymond Marcel, Marsile Ficin (Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1958), 273.
20 Cassirer, Individual and Cosmos, 190-1; see also 69-141. On Ficino, see also Paul
Oskar Kristeller, Renaissance Thought and the Arts (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1980), 89-110, 163-227.
21 Erwin Panofsky, "The Neoplatonic Movement in Florence and North Italy," Studies
25 Cassirer, Individual and Cosmos, 135. Panofsky rightly notes that the vast influence
of the notion of Neoplatonic love was effected in both direct and indirect manners,
much in the manner that psychoanalysis was influential for the history of mod-
ernism in the arts, even when inadequately understood. This idea is useful in con-
sidering the relations between theoretical systems and artistic production, where
156
NOTES SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
Press, 1973) remains the most subtle analysis of the role of misprision in artistic cre-
ation. In relation to the experience of the Italian garden, John Dixon Hunt, in
Garden and Grove {242, n.3), astutely makes a parallel claim, referring to a study by
Claudia Lazzaro-Bruno of an allegory of art and nature in the Villa Lante:
27 Ibid., 160.
28 Cited in Arnold Hauser, The Social History ofArt, vol. 2, trans. Stanley Goodman
(1951; New York: Vintage Books, n.d.), 129.
29 See Cassirer, Individual and Cosmos, 83-7, 115-9 and Paul Oskar Kristeller, Eight
Philosophers of the Italian Renaissance (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press,
1964), 54-71.
30 Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Oration on the Dignity ofMan (1486), trans.
Elizabeth Livermore Forbes, in Ernst Cassirer, Paul Oskar Kristeller, and John
Herman Randall, Jr., eds.. The Renaissance Philosophy ofMan (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1948), 224-5.
31 Juan Luis Vives, Tabula de homine (c. 1518), trans. Nancy Lenkeith, in Cassirer,
32 Juan Luis Vives, cited in John Hale, The Civilization of Europe in the Renaissance
(New York: Athenaeum, 1994), 510.
classes, and botanic knowledge, see 79121 of this work. The locus classicus of the
subject remains Michel Foucault, The Order of Things, n.t. (1966; New York:
Vintage, 1973).
34 Cited in Edgar Wind, Pagan Mysteries in the Renaissance (1958; New York: Norton,
1968), 2l8.
36 Ibid., 99. Perhaps the most familiar contemporary example of this dictum is
37 The erotic poetics of the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili speddcaWy justifies the use of
this adjective.
41 Ibid., 25.
appeared in Paris in 1546, published by Kerver under the title Discours du songe de
157
NOTES SYNCRETISM AND STYLE
Poliphilr, the English translation, entitled The Strife ofLove in a Dreame, appeared
in London in 1592; the contemporary Italian edition of Hypnerotomachia Polophili
was edited by Giovanni Pozzi and Lucia A. Ciapponi (Padua, 1964). Translations in
the current study are by the author, from the recent French edition (based on the
1546 Jean Martin translation), Le Songe de PoliphiU (Paris: Imprimerie Nationale
Editions, 1994), edited, prefaced, and transliterated into modern French by Gilles
Polizzi. On the influence of this book in France, see Anthony Blunt, "The
Hypnerotomachia Pobphili in lyth-Century France," Journal of the Warburg Institute
on gardens and landscape, Simon Schama, Landscape and Memory (New York:
Alfred A. Knopf 1995), 268-79. For an idiosyncratic and su^estive allegorical read-
ing, see Alberto Perez-Gomez, Poliphilo, or The Dark Forest Revisited (Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press, 1992).
46 Ibid., 128.
47 Ibid., 276.
48 Ibid., 325.
51 On the epistemological problem of lists, see Allen S. Weiss, "The Errant Text," in
The Aesthetics of Excess (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1989), 77-87.
Such usage evokes the sensual and critical aspects of Rabelais (who was directly
influenced by Hypnerotomachia), the phantasmic and nonutilitarian inventions of
Raymond Roussel, and the simulacral metaphysics of Jorge Luis Borges.
52 Gilles Polizzi, "Presentation," in Colonna, Songe de Poliphile, xvii.
Blaise Pascal, Pensies (Edition de Port-Royal, 1670; Paris: Le Seuil, 1962), 44 (44).
Erwin Panofsky, La perspective comme forme symbolique {1^1^; Paris: Minuit, 1975),
157. For a more detailed analysis of this problem, see Weiss, Mirrors of Infinity,
52-77, to which this chapter might serve as a supplement.
Robert Venturi, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture (1966; New York:
Museum of Modern Art, 1977), 16.
Century France," in Mosser and Teyssot, Architecture of Western Gardens, 135. See
158
NOTES DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
7 The anguish behind this phantasm of spaceless space is made clear by Edmund
Husserl, whose own phenomenological meditations, in this regard, were particularly
Cartesian: "Depth is a symptom of chaos that true science must order into a cos-
mos, into a simple order, completely clear and exposed. True science . . . ignores all
depth." Cited in Comar, La perspective enjeu, 6v, see also Weiss, Mirrors of Infinity,
33-46.
8 Christine Buci-Glucksmann, Lafi)lie du voir: De I'esthetique baroque (Paris: Galilee,
1986). 77-
15 Gaston Bachelard, L'Air et les songes: Essai sur I'imagination du mouvement (Paris:
Jose Corti, 1943), 188. See also Hubert Damisch, Theorie de nuage (Paris: Le Seuil,
1972).
16 Ibid., 195.
17 Ibid., 194.
18 Ibid., 17.
20 The following might be cited as some of the principal fetes and spectacles of the
ballet created in Florence to celebrate the wedding of Cosimo in, 1661), Fete de
Vaux-le-Vicomte (this celebrated and ill-fated fete given by Fouquet for Louis xiv is
after the event and dated 22 August 1661), Carrousel (Paris, 1662), Les Plaisirs de Pile
[59
NOTES DEMATERIALIZATION AND ICONOCLASM
21 See John D. Lyons, "Unseen Space and Theatrical Narrative: The 'Rdcit de
Cinna,' " Yale French Studies 80 (1991): 70-90. It is interesting to note that already
in the seventeenth century the French theater used the terms cotejardin to prompt
stage left and coti cour to prompt stage right.
23 These indications refer respectively to lines 384, 656, 966, and 1277 of Ph^dre. Note
that this theatrical restriction on the representation of forbidden or impossible
scenes was overcome in the eighteenth century, especially in regard to the represen-
26 Michel Foucault, The Order of Things, n.t. (1966; New York: Vintage, 1973), 318-22.
27 Vincent Scully, The Earth, the Temple, and the Gods (1962; New York: Praeger,
1969), 3.
28 Pascal, Pensees, 103 (199). Note that what Pascal gives as a definition of nature in
36 Pascal, Pensees, no (206). It is significant that the chapter heading (xv bis) of the
Pensies, "La nature est corrompue," was the title of a dossier that was never written.
40 Ibid., 268.
160
NOTES THE LIBIDINAL SUBLIME
1 Donatien Alphonse Francois, Marquis de Sade, "Last Will and Testament," The
Marquis de Sade: The Complete Justine, Phibsophy in the Bedroom, and Other Writing,
trans. Richard Seaver and Austryn Wainhouse (New York: Grove Press, 1981), 157.
5 Ibid., 215.
1779), 4, cited in Bernd H. Dams and Andrew Zega, Pleasure Pavilions and Follies
in the Gardens oftheAncien Regime (Paris and New York: Flammarion, 1995), 136.
12 Several artists of the eighteenth century were noted for their paintings of volcanoes,
such as Sir William Hamilton, Pierre-Jacques Volaire, and Charles Grenier de la Croix.
13 D. A. F. Sade, Voyage d'ltalie (1776-9), ed. Maurice Lever (Paris: Fayard, 1995), 55.
14 Ibid., 274.
ly the Alps. See Alain Roger, Court traite du paysage (Paris: Gallimard, 1997), 101-5.
16 Philippe Roger, Sade: La philosophic dans le pressoir (Paris: Grasset, 1976), 158.
17 D. A. F. Sade, Juliette (1797), trans. Austryn Wainhouse (New York, Grove Press,
1968), 1017. Though Sade visited Vesuvius, which is cited in his novels, it was his
18 Ibid.
Bataille, Pierre Klossowski, and Michel Foucault. One concise recent analysis is
The Divine Sade, an issue of the Warwick Journal of Philosophy {i^^i\): 132-58. See
also David B. Allison, Mark S. Roberts, and Allen S. Weiss, eds., Sade and the
Narrative of Transgression (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).
21 D. A. F. Sade, The 120 Days of Sodom (1785), trans. Austryn Wainhouse and Richard
Seaver (New York: Grove Press, 1966), 235.
22 See Anthony Vidler, "Asylums of Libertinage," The Writing of the Walls (New York:
Princeton Architectural Press, 1987), 103-24. On Sade and theater, see the excellent-
ly illustrated catalog, Annie Le Brun, ed., Petits et grands theatres du Marquis de Sade
161
NOTES THE LIBIDINAL SUBLIME
(Paris: Paris Art Center, 1989) and Chantal Thomas, Sade (Paris: Le Seuil, 1994).
23 Chantal Thomas, Sade, I'oeilde la lettre (Paris: Payot, 1978), 54; this passage cites
Antonin Artaud, Le thi&tre et son double, in Oeuvres completes (1938; Paris:
25 Louis Aragon, Le paysan de Paris (1926; Paris: Gallimard/Folio, 1953), 174. The ex-
plicit relations between landscape and libido have taken many forms, from Octave
Mirbeau's Lejardin des supplices (1899) to Situationist anti-aesthetic projects of psy-
cho-geography. One charming example of the stylization and allegorization of this
tradition is the Jardin d'Omementzt Villandry, designed in the early years of the
I'amour folie (labyrinth), and I'amour tragique (swords, daggers). See chapter 5 infra.
27 See Nicole Aronson, Mile, de Scudery, ou le voyage au Pays de Tendre (Paris: Fayard,
32 Roland Barthes, Sade, Loyola, Fourier, trans. Richard Miller (New York: Hill and
33 To forget the essential role of the imagination in eroticism, with both its joyful and
terrifying aspects, is to ponend the worst. This is the error of those who abominate
Sade's writings, as most recently exemplified by the historically tendentious, theo-
p. 31. Such policing of desire limits eroticism to specific sexual and symbolic choic-
es. To do so is to repress the imagination, to seriously misunderstand literature, and
to fuel the worst essentialisms and fundamentalisms.
34 Denis Diderot, "Libertinage," an entry from Encyclopedie (1751-76) in Oeuvres com-
pletes, vol. 15, ed. Assezat and Tourneux (Paris: 1875-1879), 510; cited in Vidler,
Writing ofWalb, 103.
36 Ibid.
36 (1986): 103.
38 Ibid.
39 Ibid., 104.
162
NOTES NO MANS GARDEN
No Man's Garden
1 Henry David Thoreau, The Maine Woods (Boston and New York: Houghton
Mifflin, 1916), 78.
2 Henry David Thoreau, "Walking" (1862), in Walden and Other Writings, ed. Brooks
Atkinson (New York: Modern Library, 1950), 602-3.
3 Ibid., 605.
4 Ibid., 609.
7 Ibid., 619.
8 Thoreau, "Walden," Walden, 105-7.
9 Leo Marx, The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in America
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1964), 27. This work is updated in Leo Marx,
"The American Ideology of Space," in Stuart Wrede and William Howard Adams,
eds., Denatured Visions: Landscape and Culture in the Twentieth Century (New York:
Museum of Modern Art, 1991), 62-78.
10 Cited in Wolfgang Schivelbusch, The Railway Journey: The Industrialization of Time
and Space in the 19th Century (1977; Berkeley, University of California Press, 1986), 52.
17 John Dixon Hunt, Gardens and the Picturesque: Studies in the History ofLandscape
Architecture (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1992), 178-9-
18 Thoreau, "
Walking" 613. In Saint Louis in 1848, John Adams Hudson presented an
extremely popular panorama representing a voyage of four days and three nights up
the Hudson River. From 1846-8, John Banvard traveled from the Midwest to the
163
NOTES NO MANS GARDEN
East Coast and then to London with his panorama of a voyage on the Mississippi
River from the mouth of the Missouri to New Orleans; it consisted of over 400
meters of depicted scenes. See Bernard Comment, Le XIX^ siicle des panoramas
(Paris: Adam Biro, 1993), 35 and Stephen Oettermann, The Panorama: History ofa
Mass Medium, trans. Deborah Lucas Schneider (New York: Zone Books, 1997).
19 Cited in Comment, XIX' Steele, 77. It is interesting to note that one of the inven-
tors of photography, Louis Jacques Mand^ Daguerre, began his career as a construc-
tor of dioramas.
22 John Ruskin, The Complete Works, vol. 5 (n.p., n.d.), 370; cited in Schivelbusch,
23 Matthew E. Ward, English hems; or, Microcosmic Views of England and Englishmen
(New York, 1853), 72; cited in Schivelbusch, Railway Journey, 60.
24 The standardization of time in the industrial countries was in great part established
due to the need to coordinate railway travel. While the trains in Great Britain
could run on Greenwich time and the trains in France on Paris time, the vastness
of the United States made it impossible for the railroads to function solely on
Washington or New York time. Thus in 1884 the world was divided into twenty-
four unified time zones, and in 1889 the U.S. was divided into four zones.
25 Advances in steel and glass construction were essential to both the railway and to
architecture, both of which transformed the aesthetic relation to nature by cutting
the observer oflf from the panoramic scene. See Schivelbusch, Railway Journey,
45-51. For an illustrated history of interest in relation to botanic collection and
exhibition, see May Woods and Arete Swartz Warren, Glass Houses: A History of
Greenhouses, Orangeries and Conservatories {Htw York: Rizzoli, 1988).
26 Henry Adams, The Education of Henry Adams (1907; New York: Modern Library,
1931). 379-90.
27 In this context, see Paul Virilio, Esthitique de la disparition (Paris: Balland, 1980);
29 Ibid., 613. This has become a catchphrase for the contemporary conservation move-
ment; the tide of a best-selling volume produced by the Sierra Club, containing
text by Thoreau and photographs by Eliot Porter, one of America's premier bird
and nature photographers, is In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World (1961).
30 Cited in Thoreau, "Walking," 611.
paysans, paysages," Court traite du paysage (24-30), Alain Roger explains that for
most peasants the concept of the beautiful is rarely applicable to the landscape,
since the land is considered in strictly practical and instrumental terms, a fact
33 Ibid., 45-6.
34 Robert Beverly, History and Present State of Virginia (1705), reprint edited by Louis
164
NOTES NO MANS GARDEN
B. Wright (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1947), cited in
36 Ibid., 128. The breadth of this issue is beyond the scope of the present essay; see
37 John Muir, A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf{Boston and New York: Houghton
Mifflin, 1916).
38 Cited in Stephen Fox, John Muir and His Legacy: The American Conservation
Movement (Boston: Little, Brown, 1981), 83.
39 Such is the myth; the reality is otherwise. The National Parks areas saved because
ecration by the sightseers who began to flock to them. The visitors, those who guar-
antee the political necessity and existence of the National Parks, are often precisely
those who despoil them through number alone, even if not always in deed. Indeed,
the aesthetics of early photography and landscape painting, see the suggestive cata-
log edited by Peter Galassi, Before Photography: Painting and the Invention of
Photography (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1981), which attempts to show
how, contrary to received opinion, it was landscape painting that influenced the
pictorial composition of early photography before the implied "realism" of photog-
raphy caused any revolution in landscape painting. The photographic revolution
did not, as common opinion claimed, "liberate" painting from representation;
rather, it expanded the stylistic possibilities of representation and transformed forms
of perception.
42 Cited in In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World (New York: Sierra
43 Edgar Allan Poe, "The Domain of Arnheim, or the Landscape Garden" (1846), in
The Complete Tales and Poems ofEdgar Allan Poe (New York: Modern Library, 1938),
609.
44 For the most detailed epistemology to date from this perspective, see David Abram,
The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World
(New York: Pantheon, 1996).
45 Cited in Michael R Cohen, The Pathless Way: John Muir and American Wilderness
46 Oliver Wendell Holmes, "The Stereoscope and the Stereograph" (1859), cited in
Beaumont Newhall, ed., Photography: Essays & Images (New York: Museum of
Modern Art, 1980), 60.
[65
NOTES IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
In Praise ofAnachronism
276-90. This text offers the categorization of a disparate set of works, notably by
Carl Andre, Alice Aycock, Christo, Hamish Fulton, Michael Heizer, Nancy Holt,
Sol LeWitt, Richard Long, Walter de Maria, John Mason, Mary Miss, Robert
Morris, Bruce Naumann, Robert Irwin, Richard Serra, Charles Simonds, Robert
3 Ibid.
4 See Daniel Charles, "Closes sur le Ryoan-ji," Closes sur John Cage (Paris: Union
G^n^rale d'fiditions, 1978), 269-88.
5 One philosophical work appropriate to the heterogeneity of landscape as aesthetic
8 Andrd Felibien, Relation de la fete de Versailles du 18 juillet 1668 (1668) in Les fetes de
Versailles (Paris: Editions Dedale, Maisonneuve et Laroze, 1994.) The infamous fete
of 17 August 1661 at Vaux-le-Vicomte, given in the honor of Louis xrv and marking
the downfall of Fouquet, was the prototype for the considerably more elaborate
fetes at Versailles.
12 Frederick Law Olmsted, The Spoils of the Park (n.p., n.d.), cited in Jack Flam, ed.,
Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings (Los Angeles: University of California Press,
1996), 157. Edouard Francois Andr^, author of LArt des jardins : Traiti ginirale de la
composition des pares et jardins (1879), actually codified and expanded on the work
of Alphand and Barillet-Deschamps.
13 Aragon, Le paysan de Paris, 178.
166
NOTES IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
17 "Villandry: The Ultimate Kitchen Garden The Most Elaborate and Unusual of all
Formal Gardens," Garden: Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society {]2siu2iTy 1976),
18 Francois Carvallo, "Les jardins," La Gazette Illustree des Amateurs de Jardins (1956),
cited in Carvallo, Joachim Carvallo et Villandry, 51-2.
19 See Monique Mosser, "The Impossible Quest for the Past: Thoughts on the Resto-
ration of Gardens," in Mosser and Teyssot, Architecture of Western Gardens, 525-9.
20 A useful introductory text is Stephen Bann, "The Garden and the Visual Arts in the
92-107. A perspective from within the history of landscape architecture that deals
thoughtfully and provocatively with these issues is Gavin Keeney, "Noble Truths,
Beautiful Lies & Landscape Architecture" (Master diss., Cornell University, 1993).
" in Mosser
21 See Fernando Aliata, "The Pictorial Technique of 'Ecological Painting,'
and Teyssot, Architecture of Western Gardens, 519-21.
22 See Catherine Royer, "Art Deco Gardens in France," in Mosser and Teyssot,
Architecture of Western Gardens, 460-5.
23 From among the many books on the topic, see Michael Schuyt, Joost Elflfers, and
George R. Collins, eds.. Fantastic Architecture: Personal and Eccentric Visions (New
York: Abrams, 1980); the major journal devoted to outsider art, Raw Vision, edited
mented in various essays in Wrede and Adams, Denatured Visions. Typical of such
endeavors are most of the gardens displayed annually at the Festival International
des Jardins at the Chateau de Chaumont-sur-Loire in France.
25 See Stephen Bann, "The Gardens of Ian Hamilton Finlay," in Mosser and Teyssot,
Architecture of Western Gardens, 522-4.
30 Philippe Ciller, Le gout et les mots : Litterature et gastronomic (xii/-xxf siecles) (Paris:
35 Ibid., 27-28.
167
NOTES IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
"architecture," see Anthony Vidler, The Architectural Uncanny: Essays in the Modem
Unhomely {Czmht'xA^e, MA: MIT Press, 1992).
37 Michel Bras, Le livre de Michel Bras (Rodez: Editions de Rouergue, 1991). It is fasci-
founders of the nouvelle cuisine, Paul Bocuse, Michel Guerard, and Jean and Pierre
Troisgros, and the much younger Michel Bras. Perhaps even more indicative, in an
oblique manner, is that in the recent publication, Elisabeth Barille and Catherine
Laroze, The Book of Perfume (Paris: Flammarion, 1995), only two chefs are men-
tioned in regard to the use of aromatics in cooking: Maurice Maurin of the Paris
restaurant Macis et Muscade, and Bras. Furthermore, the cuisine of such chefs as
Bras and Marc Veyrat at the Auberge de I'Eridan in Annecy (Haute-Savoie) are
often mentioned in an ecological context, due to both their intimate and erudite
relation to the environment and their work in restituting m^y lost or unknown
plants into French cuisine. See Jean Maisonneuve, "La cuisine des champs," Gault-
Millau (May 1991): 47-52. For an intimate appreciation of the relations between
food, the seasons, and the earth, see Patience Gray, Honey From a Weed: Fasting and
Feasting in Tuscany, Catalonia, the Cyclades and Apulia (New York: Harper & Row,
1986); on the geographic specificity of French cuisine, see Jean-Robert Pitte,
Gastronomic franqaise : Histoire et geographic d'une passion (Paris: Fayard, 1991); for
the relation between cuisine and the arts, see Allen S. Weiss, Flamme etfestin : Une
poetique de la cuisine (Paris: Editions Java, 1994).
39 The original plan for the restaurant had the dining room set in an interior garden,
with the tables interspersed between the stones, but structural and practical exigen-
cies prevailed.
landscape, so too does his book dissimulate the restaurant. While its splendid pho-
tographs depict his dishes and techniques, as well as the natural beauties of the
Aubrac, neither exterior architecture, nor interior design, nor even the restaurant
garden appear anywhere in the book, except for the nearly abstract line drawings
that adorn the endpapers. Yet this too might be understood in terms of a gastro-
nomic-aesthetic logic, which at each point aims at foregrounding and symbolizing
the dishes themselves.
41 Wallace Stevens, "Anecdote of the Jar," The Collected Poems (New York: Vintage,
1990), 76.
168
NOTES IN PRAISE OF ANACHRONISM
Flam, Robert Smithson, 251. Smithson's sense of his own place in the tradition of
46 Robert Smithson, "A Tour of the Monuments of Passaic, New Jersey" (1967), in
47 Paul Sharits, "Postscript as Preface" (1973), Film Culture 6^-66 (1978): 4. See Sharits's
51 Ibid., 129.
52 Ibid., 127.
53 Ibid., 133.
54 Dead Treev/zs first installed in Diisseldorf in 1969 and destroyed; it was recreated in
New York in 1997. See the exhibition catalogue on the occasion of this reconstruc-
tion, Joe Amrhein and Brian Conley, eds., Robert Smithson (New York: Pierogi
56 See Robert Smithson, "A Provisional Theory of Non-Sites" (1968), in Flam, Robert
Smithson, 364.
60 Ibid., 90.
62 J. G. Ballard, "Which Way to Inner Space?" (1962), A User's Guide, 198. On this
topic, see the excellently illustrated catalogue, Maurice Tuchman and Carol Eliel,
eds., Parallel Visions: Modern Artists and Outsider Art (Los Angeles: Los Angeles
County Museum of Art, 1992). One of the finest monographic studies on the topic
of madness and alternate reality systems is Elka Spoerri, ed., Adolf Wolfli:
Draftsman, Writer, Poet, Composer (\t\\2iC3i, NY: Cornell University Press, 1997)-
63 J. G. Ballard, "Time, Memory and Inner Space" (1963), A User's Guide, 200.
65 Robert Smithson, "A Sedimentation of die Mind" (1968), in Flam, Robert Smithson, 105.
66 Ibid.
[69
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Acknowledgments
For their sundry insights and support, I would Uke to thank the following people:
Bauduin, Brian Conley, Henri Olivier, Steven Kruger, Chantal Thomas, and especial-
ly Clare Jacobson, whose editorial acuity, sensitivity, and thoughtfiilness is exemplary.
Earlier versions of certain parts of this book have appeared in the following
publications: Herve Chandes, ed., v4zr (Paris: Fondation Carrier, 1993); Architecture
New York 19/20 (1997); and Sulfur -^^ (1996).
Photo credits
Allen S. Weiss: 2, 12, 46, 72, 116, 118, 120, 134, 154, 176.
Patrick Berry, photographer, from Christian Zapatka, The American Landscape (New
York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1995), 105: 102.
its profoundly metaphysical origins, its transfixing history, and its virtually
infinitizing future. The very term 'garden' has become so dramatically recon-
ceived by Weiss that it seizes the agency of transitivity itself all the classical
mined by our arts since the Renaissance. Each of the chapters is document-
ed by a wealth of philosophical and artistic material, astutely brought into
play and shown in its multifold interrelationships As ever, Weiss uses his-
tory in a firesh and imaginative (and even subtly perverse!) marmer so that
Unnatural Horizons, with its original iconography and the delightful music of
its language, sounds very much like a Gesamtkunstwerk in itself It is, indeed,
a masterwork."
ISBN lSb6'=16-131-2
90000