Landscape Accents
Landscape Accents are great gift ideas. They also can add that special touch of flair to your yard or business landscape.
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In this stunning piece, master sculptor Klaus Kinast presents his interpretation of the Queen of the Garden. Flawless in beauty and with an elegant elongated neck, Hortus Reginae will proudly rule over your garden space. Use her as a planter, pedestal or birdbath. She looks particularly regal adorned with the flowering appendices of a cascading plant, substituting for hair.
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Sale!
- Boulder Seat with Stand
- 19" Tall
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A griffin is a mythical monster with the head and wings of an eagle and the body and tail of a lion. From the Latin gryphus, griffins were revered in medieval times and animated in sculpture found upon churches and cathedrals throughout Europe. The strength and grace of a lion and the alert panoramic sight of an eagle characterize the griffin’s appeal.
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Cousin to Bob, Ernie is a curious creature who inhabits only the finer gardens. Charming and passionate, he is shown here demonstrating his amorous intentions with the offer of a flower. Known for his popularity with the ladies, Ernie’s irresistible smile and puppy dog eyes make him a perennial favorite.
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Out of stockThis cute woodland fellow is hand made in North America by Castart Studios. He is made from a high quality concrete that has been uniquely stained for an aged patina look. He can be left outside, year round (even in the harshest environment) or enjoyed indoors.Treeman is a close relative to the mythical Greenman; the difference being Treeman’s face emerges from the roots of a tree, Greenman’s emerges from the foliage. In many cultures, past and present, these characters are believed to symbolize the rebirth of the growing cycle each spring.
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Rapa Nui or Easter Island Megalith Located over 3500 km (2700 miles) off the coast of Chile, Easter Island boasts the world’s largest collection of megaliths. These giant statues range in height from 3 to 10m (10 – 33 feet) and were constructed over 18 centuries ago. All of the statues face westward and their significance is still a subject of debate. Some say they represent lost kings, and that one was constructed for every king. Others say they are to scare away invaders. They were carved from volcanic rock from Rano Raraku. The real mystery is how they were transported to where they now stand. Weighing as much as 27 metric tons (50,000lbs), the mystery is as great as the construction of the pyramids.
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Pictured here is the youthful face of the most influential leader of 18th & 19th century Europe, Napoleon Bonaparte. He was born Napoleone di Buonaparte on the island of Corsica in 1769 into minor Italian nobility. He survived the tumultuous times of the French revolution and went on to rise to the top of the French military . A brilliant military strategist and gifted political leader, Napoleon experienced many glorious victories and installed himself as Emperor of France in 1804. He was eventually defeated at the battle of Waterloo in 1815 and died in exile on the British island of Saint Helena.
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The Gothic imagination reverently acknowledges the awesome spiritual forces that are operative in our world, and its art stresses a reality that includes the spiritual, as well as the physical. Our gothic creature, sculpted by Craig Miller, symbolises such as extended reality: Mikan is earthly and familiar, yet fantastic and otherworldly as he peers into the heavens toward a greater single existence in which the physical and spiritual merge. Mikan’s knowing smile projects a transcendent wisdom cultivated through his long contact with the continuous flow of human experience. He is like a spectre of departed years, and shall remain long after those who now gaze upon him have ceased to be in this world.