Garden News

News

Garden Stories

Ties to America鈥檚 First Botanist

The handmade boxes hint at the spirit of America鈥檚 first botanist and the oldest surviving botanic garden in the country. Nestled inside each box are thought-provoking items, including pieces of a tulip poplar and honey locust trees from the beloved garden of eighteenth-century explorer and botanist John Bartram (1699-1777).

Bartrams Boxes

Artist Claire Owen and poet Beth Feldman Brandt, who collaborated on the boxes, are traveling from Philadelphia to give a free talk October 6 at the 91短视频. An exhibition featuring the boxes and other material related to Bartram runs through January 12, 2020, at the Lenhardt Library.

Bartram鈥檚 Garden, once visited by notables such as George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, is now a 45-acre National Historic Landmark in Philadelphia.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an amazing place,鈥 said Owen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just beautiful. There are still hundreds of gorgeous [original] trees.鈥

In 2010, after a fierce storm felled several trees on the grounds, Bartram鈥檚 Garden devised a collaborative project with The Center for Art in Wood, also in Philadelphia. The project, Bartram鈥檚 Boxes Remix, features the work of artists who created works that included wood from the felled trees. Each piece is meant to celebrate Bartram鈥檚 desire to share his passion for trees and other plants.

Bartrams Boxes

An anonymous friend of the Garden purchased the three boxes by Owen and Brandt and donated them to the Lenhardt Library. Each one opens up like a book and tells a story about Bartram and his family, through poetry written by Brandt and other artistic means.

Owen, a book artist, designed the boxes as an homage to Bartram鈥檚 influence. Bartram traveled throughout the Eastern seaboard to collect seeds and plant specimens. He packed wooden boxes with his finds and shipped them to British merchants, helping to seed the gardens of Europe with magnolias, azaleas, and other new plants from the New World.

The three boxes honoring Bartram link all of us to a shared heritage. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e a continuation of a fascination we have with the natural world and in collecting and documenting the human species,鈥 said Owen. 鈥淣ature is a vast source of that fascination.鈥