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Something Seductive to Do
When It's Really Cold Outside

By Madelyn Miller

You can always fantasize and imagine yourself surrounded by a lush paradise. Close you eyes and dream of a warm tropical place. Or open a a great book about beautiful gardens and dream and fantasize about the flowers. It will make you feel warm inside even when it is freezing outside.

Take Mexico for example. Mexico is hot.  The colors of Mexico are hot and vibrant.  The gardens of Mexico are hot and vibrant and seductive.  A stunning collection of these gardens and landscapes of Mexico awaits the reader in PARAÍSO MEXICANO: Gardens, Landscapes, and Mexican Soul (Clarkson Potter/Publishers, March 2002) by Marie-Pierre Colle. 

Colle has gathered more than 280 full-color photographs—much as one would gather blossoms for a bouquet—that capture the extravagant diversity of plant life and the garden aesthetic in Mexico.  The gardens may be carefully planned botanical collections or works of surrealist whimsy; some are spaces where nature was allowed to roam while others are as finely manicured as a model’s hand.  What draws them all together is the Mexican soul, a culture, as Alfonso Alfaro writes in the introduction, “synonymous with plant life, and plant life was transformed into art.”

PARAÍSO MEXICANO showcases the spectrum of the Mexican landscape, from its arid deserts and mountainous regions, to lush tropical jungles and plateaus. Colle’s text chronicles the creation and history of each garden, its designers, and its owners.  Indeed, many of the gardens found in PARAÍSO MEXICANO are the work of Mexico’s finest artists and architects, such as the world-famous Luis Barragán, whose mystical gardens still possess the power to fascinate any observer, and Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, whose garden at the Blue House continues to delight visitors.  Also represented are the gardens of Octavio Paz, actress María Felix—whose gardens have never before been seen by the public—and cameraman Gabriel Figueroa Flores.

The past is most eloquently seen in the image of the house of Cortés, now overgrown by the jungle and in essence a garden itself, in the chapters on colonial and hacienda gardens.  The present shines in the work of contemporary landscape designers.  The scope of Mexico’s geography and climate comes to life in chapters on the gardens outside Mexico City and those along the coast.  And the Mexican soul may be no more evident than in the temporary “gardens” created for the Day of the Dead.  At the back of the book, Colle has included a section entitled, “Gardens to Visit,” an extensive listing of gardens in Mexico with detailed descriptions and contact information so that readers may visit and experience their true beauty up close.  PARAÍSO MEXICANO is perfect for the armchair traveler, lovers of Mexican art and architecture, and garden enthusiasts who will all find delight within its pages.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

MARIE-PIERRE COLLE is the author or coauthor of several books, including Frida’s Fiestas: Recipes and Reminiscences of Life with Frida Kahlo and Mexico: Houses of the Pacific.  Of Mexican-French heritage, she began her career as a journalist in New York and has worked for such magazines as Vogue, House & Garden, and Condé Nast Traveler.  She currently resides in Mexico.

ALFONSO ALFARO is the director of the Institute of Investigation of Artes de México.  A doctor of anthropology at the Sorbonne, he is the author or coauthor of several books published in Mexico.

PARAISO MEXICANO
Gardens, Landscapes, and Mexican Soul
By Marie-Pierre Colle
Published by Clarkson Potter/Publishers
a Publication date: March 5, 2002 a ISBN: 0-609-60686-7
Price: $60.00 a Pages: 240 a 280 Full-color photographs
www.clarksonpotter.com

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