Daily Archives: February 7, 2024


Tuesday, June 4, 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Twilight Garden Party – Save the Date & Sponsorship Opportunities

The Garden Club of the Back Bay’s spring fundraiser helps the Club support its mission. Neighborhood tree care is the starting point of the Club’s activities – the commitment to trees in citywide, and regional. Visit https://gardenclubbackbay.org/ to read about all the Club does, and plan to join members and friends on June 4 at The Newbury at 1 Newbury Street, for a glamorous evening of celebration. Contact Maureen or Maura for details by emailing info@gardenclubbackbay.org


Now Through March 31 – Forest Futures

FOREST FUTURES explores the intertwined history of forests and humanity, critically examining the past and the present to emphasize our profound connection with these vital habitats. A glance at the ungraspable timeline of forest evolution, 350 million years, reveals an alarming fact: a millennium of human activity—a blink of an eye in geological time—has threatened the equilibrium of these life-sustaining ecosystems.

Through the collective efforts of scholars, scientists, designers, artists, policymakers, and communities to restore and conserve the biodiversity that remains, today’s forests have become designed environments. Yet, it is essential to recognize that silvicultural practices and other forms of forest management entail the construction of symbiotic relationships with living beings while enabling nature’s own processes to unfold freely. Trees—indeed, all flora—are wildlife.

FOREST FUTURES celebrates nature’s ineffable essence. By urging a sensorial connection beyond observation, the exhibition underscores the limits of logic alone to fathom the natural world’s complexity. Instinct over reason offers a further lens to envision potential narratives within the still-unknown realm of forests. The paradox lies in merging design—fundamentally a reasoned and measured endeavor—with raw nature. This juxtaposition produces the challenge—at times the overwhelming sensation—of learning the vast science of forests while at the same time staying deeply attuned to the powerful experiential dimension they offer.

FOREST FUTURES’ curatorial approach reflects the diverse storylines explored in the seminar FORESTS: History and Future Narratives at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. As forests capture the attention of multiple disciplines, each exhibition section incorporates historical, technical, artistic, and scientific perspectives. In addition, forests require many forms of labor. Beyond the actual planting—now undertaken by both human hands and robots—advocates, activists, citizen foresters, and volunteers contribute enormous efforts to making healthy forests a reality. Urban forests, in particular, become tangible expressions of the dialogue between design and the natural world, offering opportunities for climate change adaptation and environmental justice. Together, these various perspectives converge on the larger ambition of more equitable societies, each thriving under the vast canopies of the earth’s munificent forests.

The exhibit, curated by Anita Berrizbeitia, is on view at the Druker Design Gallery in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design in Cambridge now through March 31. For more information visit www.gsd.harvard.edu