Frederick Law Olmsted: Bringing Nature to the City

August 4 2022 | 5:30pm to 7:00pm

Dossin Great Lakes Museum

100 Strand Drive, Belle Isle

Join us for a special Thursday evening lecture on the remarkable life and career of the Renaissance-man Frederick Law Olmsted with historian and filmmaker Laurence Cotton (originator of and consulting producer to the PBS special “Frederick Law Olmsted: Designing America”). Known as a writer, philosopher, social reformer, advocate for the preservation of natural scenery and creator of some of the most beautiful public and private parks and gardens in all of North America, Olmsted was born 200 years ago as of April 26, 2022.

Cotton will trace the design traditions, aesthetics and philosophies that influenced Olmsted’s thought - including English garden design, the Hudson River School and Transcendentalism. He will also give a visual tour of representative masterful landscapes designed by Olmsted, Senior, as well as his two sons and the Olmsted Bros. landscape architecture firm, as the footprint of their works literally stretch across the entire continent of North America, with something of a focus the Midwest and Great Lakes States.

Laurence Cotton, currently based in Portland, Oregon, a city that benefits from an Olmsted-master planned park system, originally hails from Boston, renowned for its Olmsted landscapes and the home base for generations of landscape design practitioners working for the Olmsted Bros. firm. A practicing public historian, and writer/producer of historical films for PBS, Mr. Cotton was trained as a cultural anthropologist and brings that lens to bear on much of his work. He has worked with the tribal populations on throughout the Columbia River watershed and has also worked on open space acquisition and the designs of parks and trails in Pacific Northwest. He also brings training as an interpretive naturalist, is a birder and a photographer.

Ticket Prices
Description
Price
Members
$10
Guests
$20