10 Great Places to See Art Enhance Nature

You don't have to stay inside to view art.

ByABC News
October 27, 2011, 10:54 PM

Oct. 29, 2011— -- You don't have to stay inside to view art. Sculpture parks and gardens combine natural and man-made elements, making fall a perfect time to visit. "In these settings, art enhances nature," says Rebecca Reynolds, a sculpture expert and curator of the Margaret Cassidy and John Paul Manship Collection in Boston. She shares some favorite sites with Larry Bleiberg for USA TODAY.

Forest Hills Cemetery

Boston

Sculpture gardens began as garden cemeteries in the 1800s, and one of the first was in Boston, Reynolds says. "It was a radical plan for burial and commemoration, linking nature, landscape design and horticulture with art and architecture." Visitors to Forest Hills, she says, will find the best collection of memorial sculpture in the country, with six works by Daniel Chester French, who created the Abraham Lincoln sculpture for the Lincoln Memorial. 617-524-0128; foresthillscemetery.com

Fairmont Park Art Association

Philadelphia

This group started in 1872 to integrate sculpture into the city, and is the main reason Philadelphia is now said to have more public art than any other city. Visitors can download MP3s or use a cellphone for tours of the city's extensive sculpture collection, which is overseen by the association. You'll find a concentration of art in Fairmont Park, a 9,200-acre urban oasis. 215-546-7550; fpaa.org

Brookgreen Gardens

Murrells Inlet, S.C.

The nation's first official public sculpture garden has more than 1,500 works distributed over 300 acres, which is just a portion of the property. "This is the largest collection of figurative sculpture by American artists in this country," Reynolds says. The garden, which dates to 1931, also has a zoo and nature preserve, and offers pontoon boat tours through four plantations that once were on the site. 800-849-1931; brookgreen.org

Laumeier Sculpture Garden

Sunset Hills, Mo.

This St. Louis-area park was founded in 1968 by Matilda Laumeier as a memorial to her husband, Henry. A few years later, artist Ernest Trova, a leading American surrealist, donated 40 sculptures, and the garden has grown ever since, now covering 105 acres. The park has walking trails and hosts films, concerts and other events. 314-615-5278; laumeiersculpturepark.org

Nasher Sculpture Center

Dallas

Less than a decade old, this center has acquired an international reputation. "It's really the best of the best. There's Matisse, Picasso, David Smith, Henry Moore, Claes Oldenburg. The people represented in all the art history books are represented there," Reynolds says. The center's setting, in downtown Dallas, offers a compelling juxtaposition of art and skyscrapers. 214-242-5100; nashersculpturecenter.org

Franklin D. Murphy Sculpture Garden

Los Angeles

You'll find one of the country's finest collections of 20th-century outdoor sculpture in this five-acre garden at the Hammer Museum on the University of California-Los Angeles campus, Reynolds says. The 70-plus works are beautifully landscaped, making it a joy to stroll the grounds. She particularly likes Pensive by Deborah Butterfield, a horse assembled with cast bronze pieces that resemble driftwood. 310-443-7000; hammer.ucla.edu

Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park

Grand Rapids, Mich.