Friday, December 10, 10:00 am – 11:30 am – GCFM Holiday Designs for Your Home

The Garden Club Federation of Massachusetts presents Nancy Costa with Holiday Designs for Your Home on December 10 at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, 320 Boston Post Road in Weston. $10, which includes a lucky raffle ticket. Register at www.gcfm.org. Nancy will demonstrate two fabulous holiday designs you can do at home.

Nancy Costa is a National Garden Club Flower Show Judge. She has exhibited at Art in Bloom at the MFA Boston, and Heritage Museum and Gardens in Sandwich. She is a member of The Garden Club of Hyannis and the Norwood Evening Garden Club.

Contact Margo Yie at margo_yie@verizon.net to confirm availability.

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Wednesdays, December 1 and 8, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Holiday Cards in Dry Brush Watercolor

This Berkshire Botanical Garden two session workshop December 1 and 8 from 19 – 1 will focus on using dry brush watercolor to replicate the colors and forms of the Season’s Flora, poinsettia, ivy, and laurel. “Dry brush” refers to the art of using only a small amount of paint to damp a brush. Create paintings to turn into seasonal holiday cards. Learn the basics of the dry brush technique, including color mixing and layering, working from light to dark, adding fine detail and using dry brush with the “skin” of dried paint on the palette. Techniques to be covered: color mixing and layering, working from light to dark, adding fine detail, using a dry brush. We will also create botanical tints for the base layer, which will generate shape by adding a luminous shadow.. This two-session class led by botanical artists Anastasia Traina will include instructional time and group critique.

Anastasia Traina is a member of SAG, WGA, The Dramatists Guild, The American Society of Botanical Artists, the Tri-State Botanical Artists of NYBG, the SBA, as well as Circle East and graduated with honors from the NYBG botanical art degree program. She lives in upstate New York with her husband, dog, two rabbits and her 40,000 bees.

$95 for BBG members, $110 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/seasonal-cards-dry-brush-watercolor

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Wednesdays, December 1 – 15, 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm – Unforgettable Japanese Gardens, Online

The Japanese Garden Society are delighted to share with The Gardens Trust some very important and Unforgettable Japanese Gardens. The virtual series starts with a new Japanese “strolling garden” in southwest Ireland, open to the public since 2015. It’s design celebrates the life of an early Western interpreter of Japan’s culture and folklore. The second talk describes a Japanese garden constructed sixty years ago to create harmonious views from the architect designed New House, both now listed by Historic England as Grade II. The third Japanese garden was constructed 110 years ago within Tatton Park, a private garden until it was opened to the public in 1960.

Week 1. 1 December. Lafcadio Hearn Japanese Gardens: Part of a series of 3 online lectures, £5 each or all 3 for £12.

Week 2. 8 December. The New House, Shipton -Under-Wychwood: Part of a series of 3 online lectures, £5 each or all 3 for £12.

Week 3. 15 December. The Japanese Garden at Tatton Park: Part of a series of 3 online lectures, £5 each or all 3 for £12.

Click through on the links to register with Eventbrite.

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Monday, December 6, 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Holiday Evergreen Floral Arrangement, Online

The Garden Club of the Back Bay’s Pop-Up series of floral arranging online continues December 6 from 3 – 4 with Nancy Cyr.

Nancy will lead a Zoom Holiday Evergreen Floral Arrangement Class.  Participants will focus on creating an arrangement of evergreens as a base using flowers that can be replaced allowing the arrangement to last for the season.  Nancy will present a design scaled for a table and  will explain how you can adapt the design for a larger outdoor installation. If you are arranging during the presentation, you will need to have a container and all the materials, including a mechanic for holding the evergreens and flowers. Nancy will show us how we can use chicken wire or a bendable branch to make our mechanic.

An email will be sent within two days of our receiving your RSVP. It will include the Zoom link and detailed information about the materials.

RSVP (no later than December 2) by clicking here: SIGN UP


     

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Thursday, December 2, 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm – Beauty, Efficiency, and Economy: A Life of Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., Landscape Architect, Planner, and Conservationist, Online

Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. (1870–1957), was preordained to landscape architecture by his famous father (1833–1903). Fortunately, he proved a talented professional in his own right, making a significant mark through innovative and creative work in city and community planning, in park development, and through his life-long advocacy for land preservation and conservation. For too long the fact that he shared the name of one of the most prominent figures in the practice of landscape architecture in America has obscured his major contributions to the field. Elizabeth Hope Cushing’s new book focuses on the life and professional career of this talented son of a famous father. Her talk provides an overview of his life and contributions to the national landscape, highlighting his importance in American landscape history. As respondent, Keith Morgan, professor emeritus, Boston University, will explore some of the challenges Olmsted, Jr. overcame in building on and expanding his father’s legacy in landscape architecture.

Elizabeth Hope Cushing is a practicing landscape historian, and author of the newly published Beauty, Efficiency, and Economy: A Life of Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., Landscape Architect, Planner, and Conservationist and Arthur A. Shurcliff, Design Preservation, and the Creation of the Colonial Williamsburg Landscape. She is co-author of Community by Design, The Olmsted Firm and the Development of Brookline, Massachusetts.

Keith N. Morgan is a professor emeritus of History of Art & Architecture and of American & New England Studies at Boston University. His books include Charles A. Platt. The Artist as Architect (MIT, 1985); a new introduction for Charles Eliot, Landscape Architect (University of Massachusetts Press, 1999); and Community by Design: The Olmsted Firm and the Development of Brookline, Massachusetts with Elizabeth Hope Cushing and Roger Reed (University of Massachusetts Press, 2013).

To order Beauty, Efficiency, and Economy: A Life of Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., Landscape Architect, Planner and Conservationist click the link. Books ordered by December 9, 2021 with the code OlmstedDec2021 receive a 10% discount. The lecture is free, but registration is required. A Zoom link will be sent to your email after registering.

PLEASE DONATE
Make a contribution to support the Friends of Fairsted Lecture Series. 

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Thursday, December 2, 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm – Official Lighting Ceremonies on Commonwealth Avenue Mall and Boston Common

Join in the festivities at the official lighting ceremonies on Commonwealth Avenue Mall and Boston Common. The 80th Annual Tree Lighting on Boston Common takes place December 2 from 6-8:00 p.m.

The celebration is presented by the Boston Parks and Recreation Department, title sponsor The Province of Nova Scotia, and additional sponsors. The holiday lights throughout both parks will light up in sequence shortly before 8 p.m. when the Mayor is joined onstage by members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Santa Claus, Rudolph, and Frosty. The show will close with a pyrotechnic display by Atlas PyroVision.

WCVB Channel 5’s CHRONICLE Co-Anchors Anthony Everett and Shayna Seymour will once again host Channel 5’s live broadcast of the event beginning at 7 p.m. featuring various artists (to be announced).

The lighting of the trees on the Common is made possible through the generosity of sponsors and contributions from other individuals and institutions. The annual holiday display includes the official Christmas tree from Nova Scotia and trees throughout Boston Common. Refreshments and additional support will be provided by promotional sponsors TBD.

For further information, please call the Boston Parks and Recreation Department at 617-635-4505, or visit https://www.boston.gov/departments/parks-and-recreation

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Happy Thanksgiving from The Garden Club of the Back Bay

We are so encouraged that our friends and families may be able to gather together more safely this year than last, and hope you will all have a memorable Thanksgiving. Please be mindful of safety protocols, however, so we don’t have another surge in December. The photo of an outdoor table, complete with blankets, makes perfect sense to us.

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Tuesday, December 7, 6:45 pm – 8:15 pm – Nurturing a Bird-Friendly World, Online

The interest and pleasure in the observation of birds, concern about how climate change is affecting our planet, and the necessity of preserving trees and forests are topics that continue to take on increasing prominence. On December 7 at 6:45, hear from representatives of the National Audubon Society and the Smithsonian’s National Zoo about new and upcoming projects that offer insights into the world of trees and the birds that inhabit them.

This spring saw the publication of the first field guides to appear from the National Audubon Society since 1995, new and expanded editions of Birds of North America and Trees of North America. The reference books spotlight the conservation statuses of species, highlight the impact of climate change, and feature thousands of full-color photographs. John Rowden, senior director of bird-friendly communities at the National Audubon Society, provides an overview of the new guides and Audubon’s conservation efforts to protect birds and the places they need, from backyards to projects abroad.

Birds, their migration patterns, and trees are also central to the work of the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute, and by spring 2022 the zoo’s historic 1928 Bird House will be transformed into a celebration of birds and bird migration through the Americas.

With almost 100 species of birds, this will be the first zoo exhibition of this size that focuses on the miraculous annual journeys of migratory songbirds, waterfowl, and shorebirds integral to North, Central, and South American ecosystems.

Through themed walk-through aviaries, interactive experiences, and educational programming, the new Bird House will offer visitors opportunities to connect to birds and the phenomenon of migration in entirely new ways.

Research wildlife biologist Scott Sillett, head of the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, previews the Bird House project and shares information about bird-friendly campaigns underway at the Smithsonian.

Rowden and Sillett also discuss ways that anyone can help birds by creating and encouraging bird-friendly spaces and communities, particularly during the winter holiday season.

Book Sale Information

Registration Information

$20 for Smithsonian Members, $25 for nonmembers. Register HERE.

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Thursday, December 2, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm – Plant Evolution, Part I, Online

In this Native Plant Trust webinar on December 2 from 6- 7, you will learn current knowledge and theories for early plant evolution. We’ll review the evidence for plant evolution including fossils, DNA, and morphology to understand how photosynthetic organisms from ancient seas evolved and adapted to life on land. Lori K. Benoit leads, and the fee is $12 for NPT members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at www.nativeplanttrust.org.

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Tuesday, November 30, 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Conversations with Olmsted: Challenges and Opportunities for Olmsted Parks, Online

Olmsted 200 invites you to join the fourth webinar in our Conversations with Olmsted series. In this series, we examine different aspects of Olmsted’s far-reaching influence on America’s physical landscape and social fabric, exploring how best to continue his legacy of parks for all people.

Parks and public spaces face more challenges and threats than ever before. In some cases, development has nearly destroyed these historic landscapes, altering them with highways, towers, and more. Unfortunately, once open spaces are gone, they’re gone forever. 

In the age of the pandemic, our nation’s parks and open green spaces have served as places of healthful recreation and respite – but they are not self-sustaining, and greater use has meant greater demand for care and attention, often with far smaller budgets. 

This November 30 panel discussion will be moderated by Stephanie Crockatt, executive director of the Buffalo Olmsted Parks Conservancy, a member of the NAOP Olmsted Network. The panel will explore the threats and opportunities facing Olmsted parks and how to protect these natural and historic assets for future generations. 

Panelists include:

  • Charles Birnbaum FASLA, FAAR,  President, CEO, and founder of The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF), a founding partner of Olmsted 200. Before creating TCLF, Birnbaum spent fifteen years at the National Park Service Historic Landscape Initiative (HLI) and a decade in private practice in New York City, focusing on landscape preservation and urban design.
  • Karen Mauney-Brodek,  President of the Emerald Necklace Conservancy. Mauney-Brodek is working to restore and improve the Emerald Necklace’s 1,100 acres. She spearheaded the Conservancy’s 20th Anniversary celebration in 2018 and is currently leading a significant revitalization of Charlesgate Park with neighborhood group Charlesgate Alliance. 
  • Andy Mitton, Principal, The Berger Partnership. Mitton is a landscape architect, board member, past president, and nine-year member of Seattle’s Friends of Olmsted Parks (FSOP). He is currently working on the Olmsted 200 Tree Project to identify opportunities to reinvigorate Seattle’s historic parks. He was also part of a task force that compiled recommendations in a report, “Rebirth of Olmsted’s Design for Equity,” for the Superintendent, Seattle Parks and Recreation and the Seattle Board of Park Commissioners. 

Register today on Eventbrite, free, to participate in this event.

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