Unbounded Practice:
Women and Landscape Architecture in the
Early Twentieth Century |
| Thaïsa Way |
| 288 pages, 7 x 10 |
| 10 color and 65 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth ISBN 978-0-8139-2808-1 $50.00 |
 |
"Groundbreaking and innovative. . . . [Way] has written
a rich and meaningful overview of the defining decades of our
profession that should become required reading for all students
of landscape architecture."Landscape Architecture
Women have practiced as landscape architects for over a century,
since the founding of the practice as a profession in the United
States in the 1890s. They came to landscape architecture as gardeners,
garden designers, horticulturalists, and fine artists. They simultaneously
shaped the profession while reflecting contemporary practice.
It is all the more surprising, then, that the history of women
in American landscape design has received relatively little attention.
Thaïsa Way corrects this oversight in Unbounded Practice:
Women and Landscape Architecture in the Early Twentieth Century.
Describing design practice in landscape architecture during the
first half of the twentieth century, the book serves as a narrative
both of women—such as Beatrix Jones Farrand, Marian Cruger
Coffin, Annette Hoyt Flanders, Ellen Biddle Shipman, Martha Brookes
Hutcheson, and Marjorie Sewell Cautley—and of the practice
as it became a profession.
Winner of a 2008 David R. Coffin Publication Grant, awarded
by the Foundation for Landscape Studies
Thaïsa Way is Assistant Professor
in the College of Built Environments at the University of Washington.