Garden at George Eastman Museum

Join your fellow Certified Nursery & Landscape Professionals and earn recertification credits on a "behind the scenes" garden tour at the George Eastman Museum in Rochester on Friday, September 16.

As befitting a man so closely associated with photography, each of the gardens on his one-time estate is pretty as a picture. Head gardener Dan Bellavia will lead us through them, giving us an insider's perspective on their design, evolution over the years, and upkeep. Afterward, he'll lead a question-and-answer session to address anything you care to ask about that wasn't covered on the tour.

From the museum's website:

In 1902, George Eastman purchased the last 8.5 acres of the Marvin Culver Farm on East Avenue in Rochester. Assisted by landscape architect Alling Stephen DeForest (1875–1957), Eastman transformed the farmland into a unique urban estate that integrated a working farm with informal gardens and elegant formal gardens. More gardens were added in 1916 when he bought the adjacent property to the west and commissioned architect Claude Bragdon to do the design.

Today, the George Eastman Museum landscape collection comprises lawns, trees, ornamental shrubs, vines, and five restored or adapted garden areas planted with perennials, bulbs, annuals, and ground covers typically grown during Eastman’s residency (1905–1932). Historic buildings, structures, and architectural elements such as the Loggia, Grape Arbor, Pergola, sunken oval lily pool, and seventeenth-century Venetian wellheads are also part of this collection.

The landscape collection is carefully restored, preserved, and interpreted for the public by museum staff, volunteers, and docents as it relates both historically and horticulturally to George Eastman. Preservation and restoration plans for this collection are based on estate photos taken between 1902 and 1932, correspondence, plant lists, and original architectural drawings and plans of the property held in the George Eastman Legacy collection.

Old Toad logoAfterward, we'll retire to The Old Toad, a charming British pub nearby, for drinks, munchies and mingling.

There is no charge for the tour, and NYSNLA will buy your first drink (unleaded or high-test) and a round of appetizers at the pub, but you do need to register so we can give the venues a head count.

See you in Rochester ... and don't forget your camera!