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Browse Richardson, Tim

1-14 out of 14 article(s)
Title Type Date Words
Gardening leave: the sculptural integrity in Ivor Abrahams's depictions of gardens overpowers suggestions of caricature. May 1, 2008 1020
The orange revolution: Tim Richardson explains how the restoration of Hampton Court's Lower Orangery Garden provides a window into late-17th-century politics as well as horticultural fashion. Apr 1, 2008 1711
Thinking inside the box: Tim Richardson goes underground in Yorkshire to experience Andy Goldsworthy's latest works. Jun 1, 2007 1364
Stately--and desolate: Tim Richardson welcomes a lucid, scholarly guide to one of the most complex sites in English garden history. Book review Nov 1, 2006 912
In love with the sky: James Turrell has created a new skyspace at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park. Tim Richardson lifts up his eyes. Jun 1, 2006 921
Gardens of the Arts and Crafts Movement. Book Review Oct 1, 2005 1178
Garden of foreboding: Ian Hamilton Finlay's eightieth birthday has been celebrated by three exhibitions in Edinburgh and tours of his garden, Little Sparta. Tim Richardson explores Finlay's mixture of lyricism, wit and implicit violence. Oct 1, 2005 1125
Writhing, bulging, burgeoning, blossoming: Dale Chihuly's spectacular glass sculptures have happily taken root at Kew Gardens. Sep 1, 2005 1202
Gardening in a place of art: Kim Wilkie's design for the Victoria and Albert Museum's garden, opened last month, is simple and serene--yet manages to hold its own against the courtyard's overbearing architecture. Aug 1, 2005 927
What is a renaissance garden? Garden historians use the terms 'renaissance', 'mannerist' and baroque' freely--and often interchangeably, Tim Richardson argues that such art-historical classifications fail to distinguish between the many traditions of garden making in Italy in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries--traditions that were often strongly regional, and overlapped in time. Cover Story Jul 1, 2005 5674
Sissinghurst and strawberry fields: despite some eccentricities and errors, the British Library's exhibition of gardens and gardening in books and manuscripts is richly rewarding. Mar 1, 2005 1071
Spry but serious: an exhibition on Constance Spry at the Design Museum, London, has been bitterly criticised for triviality by some of the museum's trustees. Tim Richardson argues that it should instead be congratulated for its thoughtful approach to an unfashionable subject. Critical Essay Nov 1, 2004 859
Turbulence and tranquility: Tim Richardson reviews the new fountain in Kensington Gardens designed by Gustafson-Porter in memory of Diana, Princess of Wales. It is a subtle and sensitive example of the current interest in water gardens by leading landscape designers working in a Modernist idiom. Aug 1, 2004 1252
Art of the well-mannered garden: with too many cliched images, Tate Britain's exhibition on the garden in art is a lost opportunity. Jul 1, 2004 958

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