The five winners of the 2016 International Garden Festival at Reform Gardens in Canada have been chosen. We show the designs and first pictures.
International Garden Festival in Reford Gardens, Canada
The participants of the 17th International Garden Festival in Reford Gardens/Jardins de métis have been announced. A five-member jury selected five garden installations from 203 entries from 31 countries.
The winning projects:
Le caveau, Christian Poules, Basel, Switzerland
Surrounded by four walls of gabions, visitors are immersed in a world of light and shadow. The minimalist installation plays with material and light, allowing people to find themselves and dream. At the same time, the stone-filled walls are intended to be a canvas for nature. Christian Poules, landscape architect and architect, is known in Switzerland for poetic art installations and sculptures that play with natural phenomena and the human senses.
Carbone, Coache Lacaille Paysagistes, Nantes, France
This installation depicts the life cycle of a tree and thus refers to the act of gardening. Like an exploded view, the viewer sees the roots of a felled tree, the trunk divided into sections, worked blocks of wood and finally pieces of furniture instead of a tree crown. A young sapling completes the cycle. Landscape architects Maxime Coache, Victor Lacaille and Luc Dallanora see the gardener as a restorative force in nature that can heal the destructive intervention of mankind.
Cyclops, Craig Chapelle, Phoenix, USA
258 wooden parts and two steel rings are the central element of Cyclops. The installation floats like a funnel in the middle of a forest, directing the focus of the visitor in the middle of the installation to the treetops. At the same time, visitors are supposed to feel the forces required to make the wooden funnel float and thus find a new relationship to energy in the environment. Craig Chapple studied architecture at Yale University and has been producing drawings, paintings and sculptures between architecture and art ever since.
La maison de Jacques, Romy Brosseau, Rosemarie Faille-Faubert, Émilie Gagné-Loranger, Quebec, Canada
Inspired by the children’s classic Jack and the Beanstalk, Romy Brosseau, Rosemarie Faille-Faubert and Émilie Gagné-Loranger will create a labyrinth of growing beans that invites you to play hide-and-seek. The seeds are to be planted in May and the labyrinth is to bear flowers at the end of July and later fruit that visitors can eat. The three Canadians met during their studies at the University of Quebec. With this project, they are exploring the feeling of intimacy in natural and artificial spaces.
TüLT, SRCW, Winnipeg, Canada
Canada is also the land of camping. This installation therefore offers visitors various small tents that they can use and modify. Each of the yellow tents can be flipped over to reveal a new perspective and a new path. The group of tents is intended to look like a school of fish or a flock of birds, individual and yet belonging together. The bright yellow color of the light structures is intended to contrast with the green surroundings and the blue sky. Sean Radford and Chris Wiebe from SRCW work as designers and architects in Winnipeg and often use familiar objects as sculptures.
Dress Up!, Ran Hwang, Sangmok Kim, Sungwoo Kim, Shin Hee Park, Seoul, Korea
This project received special recognition and will be shown as a separate garden installation.
The International Garden Festival is one of the leading garden events in North America. Since its launch in 2000, over 150 garden concepts and landscape sculptures have been on display. The five new gardens will be on display from June 23 to October 2, 2016. The Reford Gardens were created between 1926 and 1958 by Elsie Reford in eastern Quebec and are now a magnet for the public.












