BSLA Fieldbook BSLA 2014 Fall Fieldbook | Page 17

NOW / BSLA We value that we can choose the right balance of art and science, as well as theory and practice, as we design and move through our careers in Landscape Architecture. Embrace technology with a similar mindset; the equilibrium is freeing. LETTER FROM THE TRUSTEE JEANNE LUKENDA , ASLA EARLY AND CURRENT TECHNOLOGY Fieldbook’s Spring ‘14 issue brought to the forefront Frank Waugh’s accomplishments as a progressive educator of Landscape Architecture. With this current issue’s focus on technology, consider Waugh’s significant contributions in this arena as well. They were made when Landscape Architecture was in its infant stage and yet they greatly influence today’s conversations about the role of technology in our profession. Waugh’s fertile thinking resulted in numerous technological advances ranging from his still-relevant book on technical horticulture, Systematic Pomology (1903), in which he shared his observations about the science of fruit, to his invention of a photographic emulsion that greatly enhanced the products of his landscape photography pursuits. Yet, notably, it’s his deep appreciation of the spirit of nature and the balance it brought to these technological achievements that continues to breathe and impact students and scholars alike. Tw