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The Center for
Community Art’s annual June fundraiser –
the Art in the Garden Tour – honors
these efforts. This year, the tour
featured a number of Cape Island gardens
and the works of 20 local artists and
artisans. CapeMay.com’s photographer,
Sara Kornacki, toured the gardens with
some lovely results beginning with Marie
and Wally Stuard’s garden on Benton
Avenue in Cape May.
An
“Historical Marker” welcomes visitors to
the Stuards’ garden – “On This Site
Absolutely Nothing Has Ever Occurred,”
it reads. Au contraire mes amis. This
lovely backyard garden, with its lush
green grass and border of colorful
flowers set against a white picket fence
was the perfect backdrop for artist Lois
Smith’s oil paintings. A
winter
landscape, for example, was on display
in front of the white deck. A dense
border of deep green hostas just below
the easel is a calm reminder that
although summer is here, winter is never
far away. The bark of the large tree
trunk is a perfect retreat for Lois’s
still-life paintings. All in all, a
wonderful mix of garden and art.
At Fourth Avenue in West Cape May, the
garden of Mimi and Chris Wood played
host to two artisans – Laura McPherson
and Eliza Dietz. Laura specializes in
small clay sculptures and whimsical
fish. Mimi makes her own jewelry and
both ladies sat amid a garden of rose
bushes, magnolias, hydrangeas and fig
trees. Purchased in 1997, the residence
and the garden were renovated three
years ago. Color is the dominate theme
in this garden. Laura’s colorful
sculptures and Eliza’s jewelry blend
nicely with nature’s own colors –
Black-eyed Susans, yellow and orange
daylilies and the lush greenery.
The tour took a
turn onto Stevens Street in West Cape
May. The gardens are tended by Art
Joblin and Anna Marie Zabielski, whose
art is inspired by her gardens. A
traditional border garden greets
visitors as they approach the house but
behind the property is a 15,000 square
foot meadow. A wooden grid-like
structure
built
in the meadow features a number of vines
which flower at varying times during the
summer and serve as an attraction to the
many species of birds which flock to
Cape May and the meadow. Combining her
talents as a gardener and an artist,
Marie is able to capture the day to day
changes nature takes on by just walking
out her back door.
Around the corner, tourists found themselves on Bayshore Road in Lower
Township. These were gardens of a
different kind. At the home of Ro
and
Larry Wilson, nature has been allowed to
express itself, with the help of artist
and landscape designer Stan Sperlak. Art
meets garden at every turn. Stan’s
design of the front yard replaced the
usual grass lawn with native shrubs,
wildflowers and bird and bee-friendly
perennials. A path leading to the back
yard passes a large perennial garden, a
meadow and a wetlands garden. Amidst
this was the art of Margaret Heuges who
creates framed handmade tiles and
watercolors and painters Rich and Diane
Flanegan.
At
the Lower Township home of Dave and
Vickie Tryon, visitors were greeted by
lovely garden beds and containers of
lush flowers spilling over framing the
large veranda and entranceway of this
Spanish stucco house. The use of window
boxes, containers, planters and two
large perennial gardens (one 90-feet
long) establishes a quiet tone for the
woodland garden retreat at the back of
the house. The photographs of Joe
Schrobsdorf and the watercolor paintings
of D.J. Petit found a home in this lush
garden lovingly tended by Miss Vickie.
The Sunset
Boulevard home of Mattie and David Sobel
is a garden delight with
plants lining the terraced walkway and a
large perennial garden designed to bloom
from early spring into winter. The home
is designed with a view of the gardens
in mind and is large enough to
accommodate three artists. Judy
Ballinger’s beautiful sun catchers
graced the grassy lawn. The watercolors
of Glenn and Linda fellenbaum and the
photography of newlyweds Tina Giaimo and
Don Merwin completed this lovely coming
together of art in the garden.
Last on the garden
tour was the Cape May Point home of
Robert and Esta
Cassway.
The Cassways have been combining art and
gardening for 25 years at their Terning
Point Cottage. They’ve done a lot to
help their garden remain disease
resistant with the input of topsoil,
peat moss and frogs. Frogs? Yes, frogs,
along with butterflies, hummingbirds and
finches keep nature in balance.
Annabelle hydrangeas welcome visitors
through the garden gate where they were
also treated to the photographs of
Robert
Cassway and paintings by Esta Cassway as
well as a secret garden filled with
oriental lilies, daylilies, shrub roses,
hydrangeas, white David phlox. More than
30 different varieties of plants inhabit
the garden. A nice ending to a picture
perfect day. |