The Woodland Garden Photographs of Theodore Nierenberg to Be Shown at the Bruce Museum
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, January 2, 2025


The Woodland Garden Photographs of Theodore Nierenberg to Be Shown at the Bruce Museum
Theodore Nierenberg (1923-2009), Summer Garden Path, Color photograph. Courtesy of the Artist’s Estate.



GREENWICH, CT.- Photographs highlighting the seasons of a magnificent Westchester County garden are the focus of a new exhibition at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Connecticut. For more than 50 years, Theodore Nierenberg meticulously sculpted the splendid gardens of his New York estate. A rambling series of paths lead to intimate places and vantage points exposing vistas across an adjacent lake. A series of 56 photographs of these paths as well as intimate close-ups and scenic views taken over several decades and during all seasons will be on display in the new exhibition The Beckoning Path: The Woodland Garden Photographs of Theodore Nierenberg on view from August 28 through November 7, 2010.

Theodore Nierenberg (1923-2009) was a prominent industrial designer and photographer. He began creating his garden masterpiece while designing and building a modern house overlooking Cobamong Lake on his 15-acre property in Armonk, New York. Cobamong, an Algonquin word translated as “beautiful, hidden valley,” is the word Nierenberg used as the namesake of his estate. The horticultural project would become a life-long endeavor, and as the garden began to mature, Nierenberg documented it through photography.

Nierenberg earned a bachelor’s of science degree in engineering management from Carnegie Mellon University in 1944, when it was called the Carnegie Institute of Technology. Along with his wife Martha, Nierenberg founded Dansk International Designs, a business best known for table and house wares of a distinctive Scandinavian Modern style. The company was started in 1954 after a trip to Europe during which the couple became interested in the work of foreign industrial designers. Although the company began its operations in the couple’s garage in Great Neck, NY, Dansk operated for many years afterward from its headquarters in Mount Kisco, NY. After directing the company for more than thirty years, the couple sold the company in 1985.

Nierenberg’s retirement allowed him to concentrate on his many hobbies, which included gardening, cooking, traveling, photography, and philanthropy. A World War II pilot, former president of the American Craft Council, and an Emeritus Life Trustee of Carnegie Mellon, Nierenberg, over his lifetime, endowed several programs at Carnegie Mellon including the Nierenberg Chair of Design, an annual visiting professorship.

Nierenberg became an accomplished photographer and studied with many notable photographers including Magnum photojournalist Ernst Haas. In the early 1980s, Nierenberg brought one of his initial portfolios to John Szarkowski, then the director of photography at the Museum of Modern Art, who encouraged him to further pursue his artistic passion. Nierenberg continued to shoot, amassing a portfolio of more than 300,000 images. Eventually these photographs were trimmed down to a stunning collection of about 100 photos of Cobamong that caught the eye of Aperture, a well-respected publisher of art and photography books. These images were published in 1993 in the book, The Beckoning Path: Lessons of a Lifelong Garden, featuring the photographs Nierenberg took of his renowned Hudson Valley woodland garden.

Later in life, Nierenberg was recognized as a master landscape designer. He first learned to garden as a young boy on his uncle’s farm, where he practiced rooting cuttings and grafting trees. He established a nursery at his first home on Long Island, New York, and brought a number of these shrubs to his property in Armonk. He also traveled to hundreds of gardens and studied landscape design at the New School in New York. He was particularly interested in Japanese gardens and became an expert on Japanese maples, which play a major role in the Cobamong garden and were often the focus of his photographs. Several photographs of one particular Japanese maple, planted near the lake and captured by his camera in all of its seasonal glory, will be on view in the exhibition.

Through the exhibition, visitors will be drawn into Nierenberg’s extraordinary personal habitat, viewing groups of photographs representing summer, autumn, winter, early spring, and spring.





Bruce Museum | The Woodland Garden Photographs | Theodore Nierenberg |





Today's News

August 16, 2010

Funerary Masks of Six Maya Rulers on View at the National Museum of Anthropology

Tate Collection Archivist Says Uncovers Real-Life Quasimodo

Florence and State Spar Over Michelangelo's Masterpiece 'David'

Jimi Hendrix Items on Show in His Former London Home

Frank Auerbach Painting Emerges After 30 Years in Private Hands

Bob Dylan to Exhibit at the National Gallery of Denmark

Old Irish Bones may Yield Murderous Secrets in Pennsylvania

Aperture Foundation Announces New Exhibition: "Paul Strand in Mexico"

Orthodox Flock to Once-Banned Holy Site of Sumela Monastery in Turkey

Josef Koudelka's Testimony of the Prague Invasion Opens in Buenos Aires

Jackie O's Pearl Necklace Makes Over the Odds at Bonhams

Richard Deacon at the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art of Strasbourg

MoMA to Present a Weeklong Run of Goran Paskaljevic's Honeymoons

Art Gallery to Save Energy of 80 Households a Year, with "Green Gallery"

US Sound and Media Artist, Stephen Vitiello in Sydney for 20th Kaldor Public Art Project

Clarke Auction's Eighth Fine Auction Opens at Spectacular New Larchmont Location

Tourcoing Fine Arts Museum Announces Eugène Leroy Exhibition

Le Fresnoy to Show "ABC: Contemporary Art from Belgium"

Meeting Points: Ronit Agassi, Gary Goldstein at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art

The Indian Empire: Significant Works from the Portvale Collection on View in Sydney

The Woodland Garden Photographs of Theodore Nierenberg to Be Shown at the Bruce Museum

Christopher Henry Gallery Presents the London Biennale 2010

Amon Carter Museum of American Art Receives Federal Digitization Grant

Daniel M. Finley Appointed President and Chief Executive Officer of the Autry National Center

Three Contemporary Art Exhibition Concepts to Be Realized Through Major Award to Curators

Freeman's Auctioneers to Sell the Estate of Joseph S. Sorger




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful