Phoebe Lickwar

 

Phoebe Lickwar PLA FAAR

Phoebe Lickwar is founding principal of Forge Landscape Architecture LLC and an Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the recipient of the 2022 Garden Club of America Rome Prize in Landscape Architecture.

Phoebe is a registered landscape architect whose experience in the design and construction of culturally significant gardens and civic landscapes includes the National World War I Memorial at Pershing Park in Washington D.C., the Newport Beach Civic Center Park, the Glenstone Museum, and the National September 11 Memorial in New York. She seeks to push the boundaries of design through a creative collaboration with plant life, synthesizing regenerative strategies and aesthetic experience. 

Phoebe’s recent work explores the deep relationship between agriculture and design, recovering farming as a design practice deeply embedded in contemporary social and ecological crises. She is co-author, with Roxi Thoren, of the book Farmscape: The Design of Productive Landscapes, which describes the history of agriculture within landscape architecture and reveals the diversity of current design practices that have shaped productive farms as sites of beauty, community, ecological conservation, remediation, and pleasure. Her current research focuses on climate resilient agroforestry and the restoration of degraded agricultural land.

Phoebe’s writing and photographic works have been published in Places JournalLA+ Interdisciplinary Journal of Landscape Architecture, and the Journal of Landscape Architecture. Her photographic work has been featured in international juried exhibitions at Rayko Gallery in San Francisco, the Photographic Resource Center at Boston University, Sol Mednick Gallery in Philadelphia, Newspace Center for Photography in Portland, Copley Society of Art in Boston, and the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts in Little Rock.

Phoebe graduated with honors from Harvard College, where she studied art history and visual and environmental studies. She received a master’s degree in education from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and a master’s degree in landscape architecture from the Rhode Island School of Design.