Daily Archives: June 10, 2021


Tuesday, June 15, 7:00 pm – The Botany of a Buddhist Sculpture: Prince Shotoku at Age Two and Hinoki Cypress, Online

The Japan Society of Boston, in collaboration with Harvard Art Museum and Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, will present The Botany of a Buddhist Sculpture: Prince Shotoku at Age Two and Hnoki Cypress on June 15 at 7 online and free, on Zoom.

This event offers a close encounter with one of the best-known residents of the Harvard Art Museums, Prince Shōtoku at Age Two (c. 1292). In the 1930s, the sculpture was found to contain a group of relic-like objects, perfectly preserved thanks to the remarkable qualities of the hinoki cypress wood from which the sculpture is made.

Join conservator Angela Chang, horticulturist Stephen Schneider, and curator Rachel Saunders for three perspectives on Prince Shōtoku and the ongoing collaborative research into this extraordinary sculpture.

Angela Chang is Assistant Director, Conservator of Objects and Sculpture, and head of the Objects lab at the Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies at the Harvard Art Museums. She is a generalist who enjoys the treatment and technical study of materials and objects across cultures and time periods.  She played an integral role in implementing best practices in preventive conservation for the design and reinstallation of art in the renovated Harvard Art Museums (2014). She was a part of the Straus Center’s project team for the 2003 conservation and study of John Singer Sargent’s murals at the Boston Public Library. In addition to medieval Japanese sculpture, her recent research interests in Chinese jade and ancient silver have led to contributions to Early Chinese Jades at the Harvard Art Museums (2019) and Animal-Shaped Vessels from the Ancient World: Feasting with Gods, Heroes, and Kings (2017).

Stephen Schneider, as the director of operations, oversees the activities of the Public Programs, Horticulture, Plant Production, and Facilities departments of the Arnold Arboretum. He also curates and manages the Arboretum’s bonsai and penjing collection, and endeavors to maintain effective working relationships with local, state, and federal government agencies, community organizations, and other University departments. Steve’s work has taken him to Japan on several occasions, where he works closely with colleagues at Utsunomiya University. Steve began his career at the Arboretum as an intern while working towards a bachelor’s degree in biology at Northeastern University. After graduating, he joined the Arboretum staff as an apprentice and later became a full-time horticulturist. Steve has been overseeing the entire horticulture maintenance operation as manager of horticulture since 2008. He also oversees the Arboretum’s internship programs that help to prepare future generations for jobs in public horticulture. 

Rachel Saunders is responsible for the Japanese collections at the museums. She earned her Ph.D. from Harvard University (2015) and is a specialist in medieval narrative and sacred painting. Saunders has recently curated the exhibitions Painting Edo: Japanese Art from the Feinberg Collection (2020) and Prince Shōtoku: The Secrets Within (2019). She was previously a member of the Japanese department of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2004–11), where she worked extensively with early modern rare books. She has held fellowships at the University of Tokyo (2011–14) and at the National Gallery of Art’s Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts (CASVA), in Washington, D.C. (2014–15). Her most recent publications are 「ハーバード大学美術館所蔵聖徳太子二歳像に秘められた意味」(“Secrets of the Sedgwick Shōtoku”). In 佐野みどり先生古稀記念論集刊行会編.『造形のポエティカー日本美術史を巡る新たな地平』(The Poetics of Form: New Horizons in Japanese Art History), ed. Sano Midori Festschrift Committee, trans. Ando Chihoko, 71–86. Tokyo: Seikansha, 2021; Saunders, Rachel, ed. Catalogue of the Feinberg Collection of Japanese Art. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Art Museums, 2021; Saunders, Rachel, and Yukio Lippit. Painting Edo: Japanese Art from the Feinberg Collection. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Art Museums, 2020.

To register, and for more information, visit https://www.japansocietyboston.org/event-4324371


Sunday, June 20, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm – Queer Plant Medicine and Botany

Delve into queering our relationship with plants through exploring and weaving together the world of botany and hands-on plant medicine-making. This Berkshire Botanical Garden session on June 20 from 11 – 1 will be held at the Garden. How can our reciprocity with plants nourish ourselves and the collective within queer existence? Join us to discuss perfect flowers and gender transforming plants, making essences as a way to shift from extractive plant harvesting, and how to reflect care and healing through connection to plants. All proceeds will be donated to Berkshire Pride. 

atalanta sungurov was brought to plant medicine through zir deep love and comfort in the wild world while simultaneously navigating support for chronic illness and disability. In practicing community-based herbalism and as a white parent in a BIPOC immigrant family, a big part of the work ze does is endeavoring to provide access to land and plant medicine solidarity, especially for queer, BIPOC, disabled and immigrant communities, integrating healing justice and mutual healing of ourselves and the planet. Ze makes herbals brewed with dreams that will support us as we unfold into our collective liberation, rooted in social justice and reciprocal ecology. $25 for BBG members, $35 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/queer-plant-medicine-and-botany