Emily Waugh, the author of this outstanding work, concentrates on the Metis International Garden Festival, which takes place in Quebec, Canada. Since the year 2000, the festival has shown more than 150 temporary gardens that are at the forefront of garden design and environmental art. Throughout the years, the International Garden Festival has been a significant tourist destination due to the fact that it is widely acknowledged as being among the most significant events of its type in North America and as being among the most prominent yearly garden festivals in the whole globe. In its most recent publication, titled “Experimenting Landscapes: Testing the Limits of the Garden,” the company has captured for posterity the artistic endeavors of a select group of twenty-five professionals from the fields of visual arts, architecture, design, and landscape design. This book also endorses the synergies that come together annually to celebrate landscape design on a platform that facilitates knowledge collaboration and research. In spite of its remote location, the festival has managed to attract a substantial number of visitors, surpassing one million. These visitors have the opportunity to witness the artistic creations of renowned designers as well as emerging designers, including diana balmori, claude cormier, ken smith, snøhetta, topotek 1, and michael van valkenburgh. The essence of the festival is brought to light through the selection of projects as well as essays written by landscape critic Tim Richardson and landscape architect Marc Hallé, as well as reflections from festival designers. These essays explore how the garden can challenge our assumptions, provide new meanings, and change how we see even the most familiar things. The festival is viewed as a significant laboratory for landscape designers to experiment with materials, methods, and design concepts that have the potential to be adapted to their larger urban works. The book, which is being presented by Birkhauser, an international publisher based in Basel, is able to sensitively capture the ethos of landscape architecture. Emily Waugh, who is backed by her extensive knowledge of the subject and has several other books to her credit, is able to put the book into perspective. This publication, which was released today (November 10, 2016) at les jardins de métis / reford gardens and venues in Montreal, Ottawa, Quebec City, and Toronto, is an essential piece of reading for anyone who works in the field of landscape, installation art, or place-making in urban and rural environments. It may be purchased in book retailers in Canada for a special launch price of sixty dollars Canadian dollars ($50 each for two copies or more that are purchased). On IndiaArtnDesign.com, you can see a selection of photographs taken at garden festivals throughout the course of the last sixteen years.