Vintage landscape: Paris

Medici Fountain, ca. 1900, Library of CongressThe Medici Fountain of the Luxembourg Gardens, Paris, France, between ca. 1890 and ca. 1900, a photochrom by Detroit Publishing Co., via Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

Marie de’ Medici, the widow of King Henry IV of France, had the fountain built in 1630.  It was moved to its current location in 1864.

Vintage landscape: Pau, France

Pau from Jurançon, Pyrenees, FrancePau from Jurançon, Pyrenees, France,” between ca. 1890 and ca. 1900, by Detroit Publishing Co., via Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

The image is part of the Library’s collection of photochroms, which includes many views of the architecture, monuments, and landscapes of France.

Vintage landscape: Chambéry, France

House of Rousseau, Library of CongressHouse of Rousseau, Les Charmettes, in Chambéry, France, between ca. 1890 and ca. 1900, a photochrom by Detroit Publishing Co., via Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau lived at Les Charmettes from 1736 to 1742.  Today, the property is a museum.

Vintage landscape: meadowland

Meadowland, via LoCA photochrom taken c. 1902, by Detroit Photographic Co.,  via Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

Why is any cow, red, black or white, always in just the right place for a picture in any landscape?  Like a cypress tree in Italy, she is never wrongly placed.  Her outlines quiet down so well into whatever contours surround her.  A group of her in the landscape is enchantment.

— Frank Lloyd Wright, from his autobiography

The guides at Taliesin will tell you that Wright strongly preferred buff-colored and brown cows to black and white ones.

Vintage landscape: Smiley Heights

Smiley Heights, via LoCRoadside view from Smiley Heights, Redlands, California, between 1898 and 1905, a photochrom by Detroit Photographic Co., via Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

(Click on the image to enlarge it.)

Alfred and Albert Smiley — twin brothers — were wealthy New York hotel owners who came to California in their sixties:

In 1889, while in California, the brothers became so impressed with the beautiful scenery and surroundings of Redlands that they purchased for a winter home 200 acres of the heights south of the town, through which tract they caused to be constructed a beautiful series of roads, both for driving and walking, and on the summit and along the northern declivities started a thousand or more species of rare plants and flowers of such varieties as flourish in this semi-tropical climate. Each of the brothers erected a beautiful and substantial residence on the crest of the hill. This property called the Canon Crest Park, commonly known as Smiley Heights, was thrown open to the public and the park has become famous throughout the land, being visited by thousands of Eastern tourists annually.

History of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties (1922) by John Brown, Jr., and James Boyd

The Smiley estate is now “covered by McMansions,”  according to this article about Redlands in The Atlantic.

Below the garden the hills fold away.
Deep in the valley, a mist fine as spray,
Ready to shatter into spinning light,
Conceals the city at the edge of night.

Yvor Winters, from “On a View of Pasadena from the Hills