At nearly this moment one week from today, I will be having my first glass of airport wine, waiting to board the first leg of a four-week journey around the French countryside (with much more and better wine.) And gardens--as many gardens as my eyes and intellect can absorb. The list is ambitious--40 at current count--but ranked in order of aesthetic preference per region. Yellow drops are maybe-if-there's-time. Green are must-see. Turquoise are raison-d-etre-pour-moi.
The curation began during the long, cold, slow winter in New York (about which I cannot honestly complain too much, as I escaped to Georgia for most of it.) Projects were frozen under feet of snow for months. Personal relationships had taken precedence over professional advancement for even longer. And the sense of having lost "it" prevailed--inspiration, motivation, ambition all absent without a trace. For a moment, no doubt influenced by the Georgia sunshine (or a Saturday afternoon viewing of Cocktail,) I considered scrapping landscape architecture and being a Caribbean bartender. But I am both too old and too young for an entirely new career, so came the idea of reimagining, reigniting and recapturing my perception of and passion for my field, with travel as the surefire spark. Of course, with that answer came many, many more questions. Where to go? How long to stay? How much to pay? France--because I speak some French but would like to speak much more and because it is, if not the birthplace of formal design (Italy), it certainly represents the golden age. A month--because it's not so long that my existing clients get mad at me nor new clients turn their noses up entirely. The money--just praying my math is right.
Seeing, thinking, photographing, sketching and writing--those are the tools. Perspective, appreciation and incubation are the goals. Ready, set, allons-y...