Adding sculpture to your garden
After a recent trip to The Arizona Sonora Desert Museum, I became fascinated with using sculpture in the garden. If you really didn't notice the sculpture on your last visit, well, it's probably just because they do it so well there that it's not a distraction, it just adds to the visual interest.
Of course they have a pretty much unlimited budget to have bronze sculptures made, but mostly it's a question of good taste. They have it. Most garden designers don't. Unfortunately, when most garden designers add sculpture to a garden, it's some hideous weird thing from Home Depot, a pink flamingo or a gnome. That's part of the reason that I didn't even consider sculpture in a garden before. But now I'm thinking about it now.
Good design in the garden with sculpture should cause a double-take, if it's seen at all. Remember that your plants are the stars of the show. That's a haworthia there in the photo, with ice plant growing around it. And that's a trilobite behind it.
Of course they have a pretty much unlimited budget to have bronze sculptures made, but mostly it's a question of good taste. They have it. Most garden designers don't. Unfortunately, when most garden designers add sculpture to a garden, it's some hideous weird thing from Home Depot, a pink flamingo or a gnome. That's part of the reason that I didn't even consider sculpture in a garden before. But now I'm thinking about it now.
Good design in the garden with sculpture should cause a double-take, if it's seen at all. Remember that your plants are the stars of the show. That's a haworthia there in the photo, with ice plant growing around it. And that's a trilobite behind it.
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