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Morgan Library: The Garden at the New York City Museum

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It’s a generous act to share a garden with passersby, keeping the perimeters transparent instead of hiding interesting things behind a privacy screen. When a museum allows its garden to be visible from the street, the invitation is there: Buy a ticket and see some more. At the Morgan Library on 36th Street, a blank space around an imposing stone loggia has become a garden destination that can be physically accessed for the first time. It’s a lesson in how to add life and panache to an august survivor of the Gilded Age.

In the spirit of JP Morgan, a patrician collector and banker who grew up in wealth and among beautiful things, the trustees of the Morgan Library have always chosen carefully in their commissions, from enlisting architecture firm McKim, Mead and White to design the original building to hiring Renzo Piano for the 2006 expansion, which created a new public entrance on Madison Avenue. In 2016, landscape designer Todd Longstaffe-Gowan, known in the UK for restoring gardens belonging to the Royal Palaces, was brought in to revitalize the space, which he describes as “a whiff of Rome in Midtown Manhattan.”

Above: A Venetian well-head from the 15th century sits serenely among octagonal flower beds, echoing not only the footprint of the stone work but embossed shapes around the loggia, designed by McKim, Mead and White in the first years of the twentieth century. Photograph courtesy of the Morgan Library.

Describing the campus that runs the length of the library and museum on 36th Street (taking in three architectural phases: the original library, its annex, and the modernist extension by Renzo Piano), Todd likens the former lawn to a “plinth” above the street. “There was scope to use this unelaborated ground plane to establish new visual and physical connections among the McKim Library, the Annex, and Renzo Piano’s Piazza–to inscribe it with a new geometry, and to enhance it with antique artifacts that had been acquired by JP Morgan with a view to being placed in his garden.”

Above: Rich textures and patterning can be seen on horizontal and vertical planes as well as the 3-dimensional antiquities in generous, full view of passersby. Despite this, the neoclassical building is fairly simple in design. Photograph courtesy of the Morgan Library.

“The greatest challenge of this commission was to create a garden that supplied a sense of unity and coherence across the campus,” continues Todd. “One that quietly and playfully complements, but that neither disturbs nor imposes itself upon the existing enfilade of outstanding buildings that form the Library’s East 36th Street frontage.” The result is demure yet fiercely stylish—quite a mix, and something that could be said about the public designs of Russell Page. The late-lamented garden by that British designer at the Frick Collection was once visible behind railings on Fifth Avenue. Undergoing refurbishment, the space will be much reduced when the scaffolding finally comes down.

Above: A Roman sarcophagus highlights a couple of lions attacking their prey, in contrast to a cool pair of lionesses flanking the steps. Carved from blocks of Tennessee marble, like the building, the sculptor Edward Clarke Potter worked from sketches that he had made at Bronx Zoo. A decade later, he was responsible for the male lions outside the New York Public Library. Photograph by Kendra Wilson.

In 1912, JP Morgan hired a young Beatrix Farrand to make a garden around what was his home, as well as the home of his extensive collections (the library). Her intention was to display antiquities outside the building, bought by Morgan for that purpose. The garden remained undeveloped but Todd Longstaffe-Gowan followed historical clues and embedded these objects in ground patterns laid out in pebbles and cut in bluestone.

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