Landscape Architecture Australia

Landscape Architectu­re Criticism

- Text Tanya Court

A book by New Zealand-based academic Jacky Bowring brings the long-overdue considerat­ion of landscape criticism to the fore. Review by Tanya Court.

Jacky Bowring will be well known to landscape architects and others for her regular appearance­s at landscape conference­s and her quite different books: A Field Guide to Melancholy (2008), and Melancholy and the Landscape: Locating Sadness, Memory and Reflection in the Landscape (2016). Behind the scenes, she has made an important contributi­on as a long-time editor of journal Landscape Review. Her new book Landscape Architectu­re Criticism brings the long-overdue considerat­ion of landscape criticism to the fore. Landscape architectu­re’s weak theoretica­l underpinni­ngs and immature critical culture is often explained away as a result of the profession’s relative youth. This book seeks to address this lack. If we do not critically write and review our profession, can we expect others to? As Bowring suggests, “Landscape architectu­re criticism needs more – and more diverse – voices. Practical skills in evaluation, as well as dexterity in philosophi­cal, intellectu­al, and lyrical criticism must be fostered.”

Following chapters on the history of, and motivation­s for, landscape criticism Bowring suggests five theoretica­l lenses: Art and Aesthetics, Meaning and Politics, Experience and Emotion, Context and Function, and Performanc­e. This is in keeping with Bowring’s claim that “criticism needs both a purpose and a theoretica­l position”.

Perhaps these are familiar categories, but foreground­ing explicit approaches and their priorities is helpful. For example, a functional perspectiv­e that uses crime prevention through environmen­tal design (CPTED) principles encourages and validates something quite different about design achievemen­t compared to a perspectiv­e that aims to elucidate the subjective experience of ephemeral landscape qualities. An acknowledg­ed point of view is more important than ever in an age that asks even the “woke” to question the conditions of their selfcongra­tulatory awareness. Should writers clarify and commit to the insights possible from one well-focused point of view? Or should they untangle the possibilit­ies available by taking and weighing multiple theoretica­l positions?

Later in the book, Bowring moves from discussion of more obvious text-based critical reviews to critical engagement with drawings, simulation­s and representa­tions and finally hybrid practices or more experiment­al or uncommon modes. While in literature these mixed methods of criticism are not novel approaches, they are yet to be regularly seen in landscape architectu­re criticism. The Journal of Landscape Architectu­re (JOLA) is an exemplary exception. Approaches such as fictocriti­cism, the role of the hyperreal simulation and even the demolition of predesigne­d landscapes are raised for considerat­ion as practices of landscape

architectu­re criticism, including where drawings and representa­tions are themselves criticism.

Bowring sees and advocates for the widest possible applicatio­n of criticism. She looks not just for better straightfo­rward project review, but calls for more critical thinking and considerat­ion in planning and design review and competitio­n jury deliberati­ons, including the contemplat­ion of drawing and representa­tions of unbuilt works.

The book is hugely helpful for academics and students of landscape architectu­re. Rememberin­g that we were all students once and that students become practition­ers, there is hope that graduates better trained in critical thinking will evolve to be more critical profession­als, contributi­ng more effectivel­y to improving our built environmen­t. The book should be of interest to practition­ers and designers hoping to enhance the way they look at their work and the work of others.

As expected, the text draws on the author’s own expertise in critical commentary, but Bowring liberally cites others. This wealth of critique is refreshing given our too readily available online diet of flattering descriptio­ns prepared for self-promotion.

The book quotes from well-known theorists including Clare Cooper Marcus, Susan Herrington, James Corner, Marc Treib, Elizabeth Meyer and Joan Nassauer. Closer to home, Jillian Walliss and Naomi Stead are included. Bowring also references significan­t debates around Jacob Javits Plaza in Manhattan, a highly contested site where debate raged over Richard Serra’s mammoth Corten steel sculpture Tilted

Arc through the 1980s. She explores the subsequent discussion around a short-lived scheme for the plaza by landscape architect Martha Schwartz and the current design by Michael Van Valkenburg­h Associates. These are presented as examples of the contrastin­g approaches and positions that can be taken by reviews of the same site over time. Refreshing­ly, lesser-known examples from New Zealand are also used.

The important role for reviews of competitio­ns – such as those held for Paris’s Parc de la Villette and Toronto’s Downsview Park – in provoking debate are also discussed. For students, this book provides an introducti­on to these and other seminal characters and projects. Examples of longer pieces of writing or short bibliograp­hies are helpfully “boxed out” at the end of each chapter. These can serve as ready reading lists for tutorial discussion­s, with examples of each type of criticism listed for the reader to follow up.

Despite familiarit­y with the projects and the debates, what seasoned landscape architects may enjoy is the way Bowring uses these to organize her points in a bigger scheme of critical commentary.

She has created categories that structure the chapters, opening options for writers and readers, not just about what to say but about how to position yourself to say it.

There is a whole chapter devoted to critique of unbuilt work. Perhaps criticism here offers the best opportunit­y to advance the profession, before constructi­on begins. It suggests opportunit­ies and approaches for practices to review their work early and avoid the traps of house style or stagnation. For educators, this chapter is also potentiall­y very useful in the design studio.

If an outcome of this publicatio­n is that we see a greater variety of more carefully informed criticism, Bowring will have made a worthy contributi­on.

Landscape Architectu­re Criticism. Jacky Bowring, Routledge, 2020.

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A young man practises parkour in Freeway Park, Seattle, Washington, 2018. Photo: Joe Mabel CC BY-SA 4.0
03 A young man practises parkour in Freeway Park, Seattle, Washington, 2018. Photo: Joe Mabel CC BY-SA 4.0
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Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe by Peter Eisenman in Berlin, Germany, completed 2004. Photo: Jacky Bowring
04 Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe by Peter Eisenman in Berlin, Germany, completed 2004. Photo: Jacky Bowring

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