Pamela Burton | |
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Pamela Burton, photo by Cheryle Van Scoy
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Born |
Pamela Grace Burton September 16, 1948 Santa Monica, California |
Nationality | American |
Education | Bachelor’s degree in Environmental Design and a M.Arch. Master’s degree in Architecture |
Alma mater | University of California, Los Angeles |
Occupation | Principal, President of Pamela Burton & Company, Landscape Architect, Author |
Years active | 1975–present |
Organization | The Cultural Landscape Foundation Stewardship Council |
Notable work | Pamela Burton Landscapes and Private Landscapes: Modernist Gardens in Southern California |
Website | www |
Fellow American Society of Landscape Architects
Pamela Grace Burton (born 1948) is a landscape architect known for her interdisciplinary approach to private and public projects, bringing together plant materials, art, and architecture. In 2006 she became a fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA).
Burton was born in Santa Monica, California. She earned a Bachelor's degree in Environmental Design and a Master's of Architecture from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1975.
While attending UCLA, Burton worked at ACE Gallery and participated in the installation of earth-work artists, including Robert Smithson and Michael Heizer. Helping to construct Sol LeWitt’s ephemeral wall drawings, she was inspired by the way the colors overlapped. Likewise, Robert Irwin’s scrim pieces and Elyn Zimmerman’s observations of nature through photography, graphite drawings, and stone and water environments informed her about working with light, space, and perception. "Landscapes are a journey. It’s not just about the destination, but also about the journey of designing and walking through them… One of the most important things about any practice is cultivating awareness, something artists specialize in. Whenever we have an idea, it’s always amplified by the mysterious things that are about to happen. You can only take advantage of them if you are aware of them."
Burton’s awareness of architecture and landscape as complementary forms of the same process was confirmed when she took time off from studying at UCLA to visit Japan. There, in the gardens and temples, she observed the power of aesthetic simplicity and experienced the fusion of nature and architecture. “I like to think of the garden and landscape in the context of a big idea.”