International Garden Festival |
Hortillonnages Amiens 2023
Visit of the exhibition by boat


CAMON / PORT À FUMIER – Boat trip
Boarding pontoon
35 rue Roger Allou – 80450 Camon

In CAMON, rent a boat for 2h30 and sail to the different plots invested around the pond of Clermont.

The rental price of a boat is based on the number of people, from 1 to 6 max. including child(ren) under 3 years old
* 20€ / 1-2 people. * 27€ / 3-4 people. * 32€ / 5-6 people. * free -3 years old
+ ASCO fee per person: €1 / 11 years and + * €0.50 / 3-10 years
>>> Only by online reservation
To read the terms and conditions of sale, click here
For security reasons, animals are not allowed in the boats. Strollers must be dropped off at reception.


We invite visitors to continue to respect barrier gestures in order to fight against the spread of COVID-19.
If you want more details, we invite you to consult the evolution of the reception instructions and the health rules in force on the government website: https://www.gouvernement.fr/info-coronavirus


For any request for information, you can send an email to communication@artetjardins-hdf.com
or call +33 6 78 53 55 92

Looking forward to welcoming you soon!

The team of Art & Jardins | Hauts-de-France

Fragile Emergence – Mirte van Laarhoven, 2025

Fragile Emergence – Mirte van Laarhoven, 2025
Tuesday April 29th, 2025 Zoé Gambier
  • ©Yann Monel

Tucked away on one of the islands in the Hortillonnages, a small oasis is created. Here the visitor is submerged in a mosaic of water and greenery. This installation by Mirte van Laarhoven marks a tribute to new life. At its center lies a pond made of ceramic, from which plant-like forms rise out of the ground—sharp, fresh, and full of potential. Glazed in a vivid, bright green color, the work evokes the energy of early spring and the joy of growth and renewal.

The islands in the Hortillonnages just slightly emerge above the water. They are robust and pristine but also fragile and prone to maintenance. What is land and what is water is a shifting boundary, not to be taken for granted. Simultaneously the banks of the mirroring surface provide a rich habitat for trees, bushes, grasses and all kinds of waterfowl, who build their nests in this swampy terrain. This interaction of natural forces is reflected in the installation. The artwork pays tribute to new life emerging on the verge of land and water. But underneath this celebration lies a deeper tension: The installation explores the duality between promise and impermanence, between vitality and decay. Cracks in the surface hint at an urge to freeze a fleeting moment—the fragile beginning of a new season. If held too long, that short moment risks collapsing on itself.

The work catches the moment when spring, so urgent and new, threatens to freeze mid-bloom. Life, in its earliest breath, is always on the verge of either flourishing—or perishing. The work is hand-crafted out of ceramics, with a green glaze that feels inviting, but which carries its own complexity. Historically, green has been a difficult and dangerous color in art and ceramics, often created using toxic materials like arsenic and copper oxide. That contradiction—between beauty and risk—runs throughout the work.

The work is made during a residency at EKWC —the European Ceramic Work Centre—. Here a glaze with harmless ingredients was developed to acquire the bright green color. The larges pond is built out of one piece and was fired in a kiln measuring 2,40 m by 1,20 m of floorspace. Afterwards the slab was broken into shards. Next to this Mirte created a series of tubes with an extruding machine, and cut and chopped them into shoots. This process of smashing and chopping addresses the conflict of being in, or out of control, likewise to the interaction with nature. Fragile Emergence invites quiet reflection.
It is a space of stillness and reflection—a place to ponder what lies beneath the surface, and how the fragile promise of life might take shape? And what might become of a fresh promise, given time and space to grow? On this island, visitors are encouraged to pause, to observe, and to lose themselves in a layered landscape of green.

With this installation, Mirte van Laarhoven once again sculpts a living landscape—an ephemeral threshold where nature and art entwine in a shimmering tension between what is, and what might be.

The artist

Mirte van Laarhoven

Dutch artist and landscape architect, Mirte Van Laarhoven explores the interactions between mankind and nature through creations that blend poetry and eco-responsibility. Her artistic approach is based on the meticulous observation of ecosystems and a quest for a more harmonious dialogue with nature. She creates exhibits that celebrate biodiversity while raising awareness of the need to preserve it. An artistic vision that combines ecological commitment and aesthetic contemplation.
Voir la fiche artiste — Mirte van Laarhoven