The art of landscape has always been central to the Gardner Museum. Reflecting Isabella Stewart Gardner’s passion for horticulture and garden design, the museum’s interior courtyard is itself an astonishing work of art, combining plants, sculpture, and architectural elements. The unique interplay between the courtyard and the museum galleries offers visitors a fresh view of the courtyard from almost every room, inviting connections between art and landscape.
Isabella Gardner was an avid gardener, and created theme gardens -- an Italian garden and a Japanese garden -- at her summer house in Brookline, Massachusetts. She also shared her love of growing things with fellow Bostonians, filling the large bay window of her Beacon Street townhouse with changing plant displays and establishing an urban window box contest. Today her legacy continues as the lush central courtyard is regularly transformed with new plants and colors in nine dramatic seasonal displays, including the beloved Hanging Nasturtiums display each April.
Rooted in the museum’s rich landscape tradition, the Gardner’s Landscape Visions lectures focus on a common theme each season, offering challenging, engaging explorations of ideas in landscape by noted speakers. Additional educational offerings -- including Ask the Gardener hours and special landscape tours for garden clubs -- provide further opportunities to explore the changing courtyard displays and the art of landscape design and history at the Gardner.
Currently in the Courtyard
Summer Blues | on view through mid-July
With the coming of warm weather, the courtyard becomes a cool retreat with blue and white hydrangeas: Hydrangea macrophylla ‘Early Blue’ and Hydrangea macrophylla ‘White Spirit.’ Early Blue is a hybrid introduced from Holland with violet blue flowers tinged with white and White Spirit has white flowers that fade to pink blush.
The hydrangeas’ hues are complemented by the finely-cut silver foliage of Artemisia and two types of bromeliads. Bromeliad Aechmea fascinata has silver-banded leaves and Guzmania is bright yellow. The vase-shaped rosette formed by the leaves allows the plants to store water. Many people mistake the brightly colored leaves of the Guzmania for flowers. These leaves last for several months after the plant has finished flowering. The flowers are actually very small and are almost invisible among the leaves. Bromeliads come from Central and South America.
Ask the Gardener
Chat with a member of our landscape team – and find out how we keep the courtyard in bloom all year long!
FREE with museum admission
Upcoming dates:
Wednesday, June 9, 1:30-2:30pm
Friday, June 18, 11:00am-12:00pm
Landscape Tours
Bring your garden club or other group to the Gardner! Experience the magic of the verdant courtyard, explore highlights of the collection on a private tour, and enjoy an informal discussion with a member of the museum’s landscape staff. Call the Tour Manager at 617 278 5147 for more information.