Boustrophedon Garden / PLANT Architect
Boustrophedon: Alternating right to left and left to right –
the pattern of oxen tilling the land, or of an ancient form of writing.
The 6.1m x 21.3m Boustrophedon Garden was one of eleven “Ephemeral Gardens” made for Québec City ’s year-long 400th anniversary festival in 2008, and were on show from June 16 to September 30, 2008. Gardens were intended to reflect the major festival themes including the indigenous region and its peoples, and the French settlement of Québec. PLANT Architect ’s response was to draw ideas from Québec’s regional long-lot system – fundamental to creating the distinctive thin-striped pattern of agricultural development in the province – and Samuel de Champlain’s (the great explorer, and founder of Québec City ) rigorous agricultural experimentation and recordings done to ensure the survival of the future colonizers of New France in the 17th century.
The Boustrophedon Garden weaves these ideas together to create a three-dimensional landscape “cloth” that registers all observations of growth and change in its warp and weft, creating a three-dimensional garden journal as if in anticipation of improving next year’s garden. The public was able to scrutinize and be part of the changing patterns of growth and bloom recorded over the summer. Increasing in complexity and volume throughout the summer, recorded data and vegetation proceeded to engulf the visitor, while creating a dialogue with the plants that continued to change during their growth trajectory. The garden made a playful connection between food production, dynamism of plant processes, and the careful science of understanding growth necessary to our future survival.
Champlain was obsessed with domesticating the countryside and ensuring the subsistence of its future settlers. To this end, he evaluated soil fertility, the best times for working in the fields, and created several experimental gardens to gauge growth and habit in this new environment, all to an eye for gauging potential for acclimatization of European seeds. Taking cues from his research, this garden brings attention to the need to understand how our food grows – a notion that is crucial to our survival on the planet, and one which has created the mass organic and local food movements. By rendering garden measurements so large and engaging the public in it, this awareness in all its detail was brought to the attention of the visitors as the garden journal becomes visual and spatial rather than private and personal. For millennia, agriculture has shaped and reshaped our landscape and transformed landscape into ‘land use’. Although this is partially necessary for humans’ survival, we need to find a better balance with other vital ecosystems. This project brings to attention the consciousness that is required to use our productive landscapes in a more balanced, thoughtful and rigorous way to balance with those landscapes that are restored and recovered.
Timeline On Samuel De Champlain - News
PLANT Architect's response was to draw ideas from Québec's regional long-lot system – fundamental to creating the distinctive thin-striped pattern of agricultural development in the province – and Samuel de Champlain's (the great explorer,
AECCafe.com - ArchShowcase - Boustrophedon Garden in Québec City ...
The 6.1m x 21.3m Boustrophedon Garden was one of eleven “Ephemeral Gardens” made for Québec City’s year-long 400th anniversary festival in 2008, and were on show from June 16 to September 30, 2008. Gardens were intended to reflect the major festival themes including the indigenous region and its peoples, and the French settlement of Québec. Our response was to draw ideas from Québec’s regional long-lot system – fundamental to creating the distinctive thin-striped pattern of agricultural development in the province – and Samuel de Champlain’s (the great explorer, and founder of Québec City) rigorous agricultural experimentation and recordings done to ensure the survival of the future colonizers of New France in the 17th century.
The Boustrophedon Garden weaves these ideas together to create a three-dimensional landscape “cloth” that registers all observations of growth and change in its warp and weft, creating a three-dimensional garden journal as if in anticipation of improving next year’s garden. The public was able to scrutinize and be part of the changing patterns of growth and bloom recorded over the summer. Increasing in complexity and volume throughout the summer, recorded data and vegetation proceeded to engulf the visitor, while creating a dialogue with the plants that continued to change during their growth trajectory. The garden made a playful connection between food production, dynamism of plant processes, and the careful science of understanding growth necessary to our future survival.
Champlain was obsessed with domesticating the countryside and ensuring the subsistence of its future settlers. To this end, he evaluated soil fertility, the best times for working in the fields, and created several experimental gardens to gauge growth and habit in this new environment, all to an eye for gauging potential for acclimatization of European seeds. Taking cues from his research, this garden brings attention to the need to understand how our food grows – a notion that is crucial to our survival on the planet, and one which has created the mass organic and local food movements.
By rendering garden measurements so large and engaging the public in it, this awareness in all its detail was brought to the attention of the visitors as the garden journal becomes visual and spatial rather than private and personal. For millennia, agriculture has shaped and reshaped our landscape and transformed landscape into ‘land use’. Although this is partially necessary for humans’ survival, we need to find a better balance with other vital ecosystems. This project brings to attention the consciousness that is required to use our productive landscapes in a more balanced, thoughtful and rigorous way to balance with those landscapes that are restored and recovered.
Timeline On Samuel De Champlain - Bookshelf
Puritans, pilgrims, and merchants, founders of the northeastern colonies
1604: Frenchman Samuel de Champlain tries to found a settlement in Maine. ... July 4, 1609: Samuel de Champlain is the first European to see Vermont. ...City Timelines, Timeline of New York City Crimes and Disasters, Timeline of Montreal History, History of Bratislava
Timeline, a publication of the Ohio Historical Society
... whom Samuel de Champlain had defeated and fatally alienated in 1609. ... Jedediah Smith, William Sublette, Hugh Glass, *See Timeline, April • May 1988 ...The St. Lawrence, River Route to the Great Lakes
TIMELINE 2009 The St. Lawrence Seaway celebrates its 50th anniversary as a vital ... 1608 Samuel de Champlain starts a French colony at the site of ...The American West
Timeline 1492 Christopher Columbus reaches the Americas. ... 1608 French explorer Samuel de Champlain founds the settlement of Quebec, Canada. ...Daily Knowledge Directory
Champlain
Although the image on the right is the result of the artist's imagination, it is consistent with the look generally associated to Samuel de Champlain. ...
Samuel de Champlain
Facts, Timeline & History about the life of Samuel de Champlain - French Explorer and Navigator ... Samuel de Champlain accompanied his father and his uncle on various ...
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1567—Samuel de Champlain is. born in Brouage, France. He. serves in the ... Map: Carte geographique de la Nouvelle France, Samuel de Champlain, 1612 ...
Samuel de Champlain
Samuel de Champlain was a French explorer, navigator, and mapmaker. ... On his third trip in 1608, Champlain founded a settlement and trading post along ...
Dead Reckoning ~ Champlain in America : Champlain in America
Samuel de Champlain is known as the "Father of French America," the ... accurate, animated documentary on Samuel de Champlain to be broadcast in the United States and Canada. ...