Now available in a new, updated edition, The Landscape of Man is a formative study on the history of landscape architecture. From small gardens to megacities, humans have always molded their environment to express or symbolize ideas—power, order, comfort, harmony, pleasure, and mystery, to name a few. In 1975, authors Geoffrey and Susan Jellicoe linked these ideas together to demonstrate that they are manifestations of a single, innate process.
The authors examined human-created spaces from ancient Mesopotamia, Greece, Rome, the Muslim world, medieval Europe, India, China, Japan, pre– Columbian America, and the post-Renaissance West in all its phases, as well as planning and landscape architecture from the mid– to late twentieth century.
With a new introduction and final chapter by internationally respected landscape critic Tim Richardson, this edition explores modernism to postmodernism, post–industrialism to large-scale urban planning in China and elsewhere, before ending with small–scale healing and community gardens.
Redesigned throughout with a contemporary look and feel, and illustrated in full color, this valuable resource to landscape architecture is made available to a new generation of readers interested in uncovering the history of our built environments.
Pages
440
Langue
Anglais
Date d'édition
mars 2026
Taille
23 x 28.2 cm
Éditeur
Thames & Hudson
Poids
2360 gr







