Sculpture Can Bring Life to Your Garden

I should know: I've been a sculptor most of my life, and I have plenty of years behind me of experience. Most of my sculptures reside in the gardens and landscaped outdoors of residences. My work is also in public places such as parks and downtown areas. But in this article, I want to focus on residences.

I'm going to suggest what kind of sculpture to look for. Let me begin by saying that your garden and landscaped outdoors is a sacred place. But of course you know that, otherwise you wouldn't be reading this article. The outdoors of your residence, being a sacred place, deserves art that is exceptional. So you have to spend a little more for it. Listen, you get what you pay for. Further, you get the experience you pay for. The nice thing about original art is that, even though you pay more for it, you get more. The life of a work of sculpture should be indefinite. It should be able to remain outdoors without withering away. So, the initial investment is more. But you get more, a lot more. I would go so far as to say that original art for the garden is the best outdoor art investment, if, of course, you can find work that is truly art and not junk disguised as art.

Probably, you will want to include, in your outdoor sanctuary, human-crafted items that are not art: cement casts, gravel, building materials, and so on. Here, you want to integrate these items with the landscape. It is fine if the cement casting of Saint Francis has moss growing on it. Ivy trickling over a retaining wall is desirable. But when you put the art in this setting, you want to show it off. If you don't want to show it off, don't buy it. The sculpture should be the capstone, what brings everything together. The sculpture should enhance and amplify the life of your outdoor landscape. The sculpture should provide a doorway into the majesty of the garden and landscape. All you need do is look at the sculpture and you feel a connection to nature. You can be looking at the sculpture from a window inside your home, or you can be outside. Either way, the sculpture connects you to nature.

I don't, then, advise you buy works of craft to deposit here and there in your outdoor landscape. Don't do that unless the work of craft has sentimental value or is in some other way exceptional to you. Craft is cheaper than art: cheap in price and cheap in QUALITY. Instead, buy less and get more. If you can only afford one original work of sculpture, do that rather than buy many craft pieces. Your outdoor landscape is not going anywhere and neither is the art, especially if you secure it, which you should, and which it is possible to do without making such securing permanent.

Before you become worried that you will have to pay dearly for original art, let me reassure you: You can find original art at a moderate and affordable price. You can find it on the Net and you can probably find it locally as well, especially if you live near a city. Many garden shops sell sculptures on consignment. That's one good place to look. But there are many. I don't suggest galleries because the work will be too expensive. If expense is not so much a concern, then go to the galleries. Go to the galleries anyway because here there is a weeding out process and you are more likely to find exceptional art and thereby have more awareness of what's good.

For deals, you might find one at the gift shop of a botanical gardens. I have my work in the Atlanta Botanical Gardens gift shop. There, my work is moderately priced and exceptional. But what you can also do is look around a botanical garden and see if you can find original sculpture that appeals. You can then inquire at the gift shop or at the front counter or call the gardens. Because botanical gardens and similar places of beauty are set up primarily as non-profit, they are not going to want a large commission for referring an artist. As you know, galleries are infamous for insisting on taking a large portion of the sale for themselves, as much as 60 percent. I suggest going to the expensive places to get a feel for good art (though not all of it is good, I have to tell you). Then shop around. The only danger here is that you may find, in the galleries, a sculptor you like so much you just have to own his work. Well, that's the danger. If price is an issue, I don't think this will be too much of a problem.

How does one spot inexpensive-but-exceptional original sculpture? This is what you look for: Sculptures made with materials and techniques available to craftspeople and folk artists. The difference between craft and art should be evident. Art is of higher quality. You will also know when someone produces higher caliber work because that work sells for more than craft, but not so much more than you cannot afford it. A sculptor may have work that goes outside of your budget. Many who inquire about my large frog sculptures decide quickly that the price is too high for them. Even so, my frog sculptures are incredibly affordable considering that I am a highly skilled artisan as well as a professional sculptor with over 16 years of professional experience. Further, the large sculptures I produce are comparable to bronzes, at a fraction of the cost. But I also produce smaller work that is quite affordable. I do so because I want people to gain interest in possibly buying a larger work later.

Don't buy craft. A craftsperson makes the same thing over and over again. That's not art. It may seem that I produce the same thing over and over again. After all, I am making large human-size copper frogs. How different can each one be? Very. Each piece is incredibly unique. I learn something from each piece I build. An artist can focus on one theme and never repeat himself, even though his designs may seem or actually be similar.

A craftsperson who wants to make a living will often find he has to hire others to help him crank out his pieces. This is not art. This is moving in the direction of factory-made shlock. Even so, something made by hand does offer warmth and life that a factory-made item cannot. But wouldn't you rather have original art? Nature itself is so beautiful that it deserves only the best from us.

Very few materials can stand the test of time outside. Original art for outdoors will have to be made of metal, clay, cement, stone, glass, or a combination. Wood will not stand the test of time outdoors. Neither will synthetic resins. One sculptor friend of mine recycles old farm equipment and the like. He works primarily in stainless steel, and his work is exceptional. This is a method: Working with recycled metals. Not every artist is capable of achieving art through any given medium, this one included. I have seen plenty of sculpture that is unexceptional.

What makes a sculpture, or any other piece of art, for that matter, exceptional? Art has life. The sculpture lives, it breathes, it has substance and depth. You cannot help but to feel that it is a part of your landscape, a force just as much alive as the plants and the creatures that inhabit your outdoor landscape.

So plan for original art to live in your outdoor landscape. Look around. You can find a deal and get original art that's good. It is worth the effort. Once you have the art, you enjoy it for as long as you decide to keep it, which may be for the rest of your life. Such a purchase, then, is worth taking time over. Happy hunting.

Beau Smith is a professional sculptor with 16 years professional experience sculpting large, human-sized copper frogs. He also writes about art. He has written and published one book on his sculptures, and written, designed, and published his web site, beautifulfrog.com.


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Take a chocolate adventure

Plow & Hearth


Take a chocolate adventure Plow & Hearth
Frederick's of Hollywood, Inc. From You Flowers. LLC
In The News:


GARDENING: Turner Greenhouse owners moving on to other things
Las Vegas Review - Journal, NV - 12 hours ago
... to your landscape. Society members will be on hand to assist you with all your iris questions. Linn Mills writes a gardening column each Sunday. ...

Tour is a walk on the wild side
Livingston Daily, MI - 12 hours ago
Green Thumb Landscape & Garden Center is selling tickets in Hamburg Township. Beauchamp Lawn and Landscape and Hartland Flowers are selling tickets in ...

Gardeners seeking laurels
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA - 14 hours ago
The 44-year-old business consultant has had his hands in the dirt since he was a youngster taking care of his parent's garden. He did landscaping in high ...

The Associated Press

Guerrilla gardeners dig in to beautify Los Angeles
The Associated Press - Jul 4, 2008
... landscaping the rest of the patch soon. A sign sticks up from the dirt at the edge of the median closest to Sunset Boulevard. "Guerrilla Gardening," it ...

The Age

An Earthly Delight
The Age, Australia - Jul 4, 2008
He won a Churchill Fellowship in 1974 to study organic gardening and landscaping overseas. Peas soaking in a bowl of water generated his interest in ...

Gardening: Ant nests can pose problems for wood and landscaping
Salt Lake Tribune, United States - Jul 1, 2008
Ants cause landscape problems by nesting in plants' root zones, causing the plants to dry up. Ants also cause problems by protecting honeydew-producing ...

The Burley Home: Creative landscaping maximizes home's outdoor ...
Huntington Herald Dispatch, WV - 18 hours ago
"My mother, Margaret Kennard, and I do all the gardening together," she said. "We have always enjoyed working with flowers." Several years ago, the Burleys ...

Landscaping series to offer secrets of successful gardening
Tampa Bay Newspapers, FL - Jul 3, 2008
PINELLAS COUNTY – Pinellas County Extension will offer a five-session Florida-friendly Landscaping Series designed to help attendees acheive gardening ...
Get Outdoors: Gardening Calendar Tampa Bay Newspapers
all 2 news articles

Albert Lea Tribune

Garden tour spices up Bricelyn’s Fourth of July festivities
Albert Lea Tribune, MN - 22 hours ago
... anticipates this will be an annual event for the community and plans have begun for new ideas for next year’s garden plots and landscaping creations.

Badge of honor, 'Rhapsody in Bloom'
Lower Hudson Journal news, NY - 15 hours ago
There's a Zen feeling of serenity and calmness throughout the garden. "Our love of Asian design and landscaping has been a big influence here," she says. ...
landscaping gardening - Google News

Games at Buy.com

Holiday Home Store at Buy.com

The Flower Garden in August

Our flower garden in August can be brimming with activities we can do at this time of year, as we can for most of the year. We... Read More

The Hosta ? A Shade Loving Perennial

My first introductions to Hostas were four small green and white clumps edging a small section of my mother- in- laws driveway.I was not terribly impressed, they... Read More

Add Rich Color To Your Garden With Blue Perennial Flowers

Blue flowers are some of the most striking plants around and can add a rich splash of color to any garden. Plant them in a cluster of... Read More