San Francisco residents have a particularly strong liking for topiary trees, as apparent from these photographs taken by three different photographers. One is Marc Alcock, a British photographer, who after moving to San Francisco in 2010, became interested in photographing the visual differences between the two places. One of the things that struck him about San Francisco, Los Angeles and the surrounding suburbs were the houses and the unique relationship they have with plants and nature.
A house in San Francisco covered with meticulously pruned trees. Photo credit: Kelsey McClellan
“Every house on the street has it’s own unique personality,” he says. “The paint colour, the architectural features and nature all working together to form something completely personal to the owner.”
“At one end of the scale I found lovingly crafted topiaries, that were thoughtfully paired with architectural details – a conscious aesthetic decision. At the other end there are buildings swallowed by nature. The plants functioning as camouflage for the home.”
“I’m sure the people that inhabit the homes are just as interesting and idiosyncratic,” he adds. “But the details in the images only offer clues as to who may live there.”
Photo credit: Marc Alcock
Photo credit: Marc Alcock
Photo credit: Marc Alcock
Photo credit: Marc Alcock
Photo credit: Marc Alcock
Photo credit: Marc Alcock
Photo credit: Marc Alcock
Photo credit: Marc Alcock
Alan W. George discovered the same when he moved with his wife from Nashville to San Francisco. In his series of photographs entitled Domesticated, Alan examines, “domesticated urban plants and people’s attempts to control and manipulate them in sometimes trivial and inconsequential ways. My hope is that these at times humorous and tragic examples echo conditions within the larger context of the relationship between humanity and nature. I also hope that the viewer can identify with certain human or anthropomorphic characteristics of the subjects, perhaps feeling a bit saddened by their subjugated circumstances.”
Photo credit: Alan W. George
Photo credit: Alan W. George
Photo credit: Alan W. George
Photo credit: Alan W. George
Photo credit: Alan W. George
More recently, photographer Kelsey McClellan has been sharing on Instagram images of these carefully pruned trees around her neighborhood in San Francisco’s Outer Sunset. Some of them resemble vertical stacks of pom-poms, others look like swirls in ice cream cones. Enjoy the rest of the gallery below.
Photo credit: Kelsey McClellan
Photo credit: Kelsey McClellan
Photo credit: Kelsey McClellan
Photo credit: Kelsey McClellan
Photo credit: Kelsey McClellan
These trees look like the homeowners really enjoyed Dr. Seuss as children!
ReplyDeleteOr the movie "Edward Scissorhands" ;)
ReplyDeleteI'm a garden designer and gardener and have great respect for the plants I help to grow. We are told that murder and torture are evil yet we persist in the strange human notion that the way to express our grief over human deaths is to kill a lot of flowers. We also think nothing of torturing plants that are beautiful in their natural state and don't, anyway, exist for our benefit, into shapes that look hideous to anyone with any respect for nature at all. I consider what's been done to the trees in these photos as nothing less than sadistic wickedness. How can anyone admire what amounts to the torture of living things that can't escape or defend themselves from our knives and saws. Leave them alone to let their natural beauty be a joy for as long as they live!
ReplyDeleteNever liked topiary - it's ugly.
Delete