Reply to B. Crosby
"As someone once said, there is a tendency in golf architecture to confuse the painting and the canvas."
I'm sure you're aware that a painting is created on a canvas ... or some linen, or some plywood, or some Masonite, or some other support of the artist's selection (or, in the case of an artist accepting a commission, the client's choice). And the canvas, or any other of those supports, may be entirely covered by the paint or pastel or colored pencil, etc.; or parts of the support might be left untouched by the painting medium. Moreover, those supports might be larger or smaller, rectangles or squares or circles or ovals. To the painter, the canvas, or support, is as much a part of the painting as, for the golf course architect, the environment is to the architecture. To either artist, I would suggest, the separation of the two -- background and artistic creation -- is impossible as they are inextricably linked.