Rogue:
Art of a Garden

by Rick Eckersley.
Photography by Will Salter.
Designed with Michael Bojkowski.
Out of print. First published in 2021.

Format
Hardcover, 268pp 370mm x 275mm
ISBN
9780648435518

Musk Cottage garden is maverick designer Rick Eckersley’s own private garden. It is the culmination of decades of experimentation in Australian landscape gardening and an emphatic expression of the loose, almost painterly approach to landscape design that Eckersley is renowned for.

Rogue: Art of a Garden documents and explores this remarkable Australian landscape and the sensibility that produced it. Much like the garden itself, it is far from orthodox. While evocative photography by Will Salter takes the reader on a journey through the garden’s plantings, textures, spaces and cycles, the book foregoes the typical series of accompanying explanatory essays. Instead, a selection of artworks by Australian artists, created in response to the garden, form richly subjective layers of interpretation.

Short reflections by Eckersley of his work on the garden, and his learnings from a lifetime spent working within the Australian landscape, round out a publication that strives to capture the spirit of a landscape that has transcended the dogma and conventions of Australian gardening, to become an immersive, total work of art.


About the author

Rick Eckersley is lauded as one of Australian garden design’s trailblazers. Throughout his 30-year career, Eckersley has designed and overseen the creation of thousands of gardens. He spent many years as the voice of 3AW’s Smart Gardening and has published two books on landscape design.


Recognition

“[Rogue: Art of a Garden] emphasises what Eckersley calls 'the sensory' ... the book serves to evoke a mood. It includes not just images of the Musk Cottage garden and the plants it contained but works by a string of artists inspired by the place.”
—Megan Backhouse, The Age

“[Rogue will] take you on a journey through the landscape, as each piece beautifully captures the textures and layers found within the Musk Cottage garden.”
Meanwhile in Melbourne

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