Tag: Global Flora

  • Thursday, November 9, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Global Flora: We’re On Our Way!

    With a focus on diversity of form, and various microhabitats in the Dry House and Wet House at the Wellesley College Botanic Gardens, Global Flora will be a unique resource for experiencing and studying botanical wonders. Botanic Gardens Director Kristina Jones will go over the details of the project and answer questions. If you have favorite flora of fabulous form, please be ready to suggest them, as the list of taxa for initial inclusion is not yet closed. The event will take place in the greenhouses on Thursday, November 9 from 10 – 12. Friends of Wellesley College Botanic Gardens free, nonmembers $10. Register by emailing wcbgfriends@wellesley.edu, or call 781-283-3094.

  • Monday, January 19 and Saturday, February 28, 11:00 am – Global Flora: The Transformation of the Ferguson Greenhouses’ Permanent Collection

    Wellesley College will soon be reconstructing the five major houses of the Ferguson Greenhouses.  On Monday, January 19 and Saturday, February 28, at 11 am, hear their plans for Global Flora, the transforming of the 1920’s facility into a showcase of living beauty, highlighting plant form.  Global Flora will become a new node for interdisciplinary science research and teaching at the College, as well as an innovative example of sustainable design.  Free and open to the public. Call 781-283-3094 for more information.

  • Tuesday, September 23, 3:00 pm – 4:30 pm – Tour of Research Gardens and Global Flora

    Explore the exciting opportunities for engaging in plant science at Wellesley College.  Botanic Gardens Director Kristina Jones leads a tour of new gardens with a science education and research focus: the Creighton Educational Garden, Climate Change Monitoring Garden, Edible Ecosystem Teaching Garden, and Farm in a Box, on Tuesday, September 23 from 3 – 4:30.  After the garden tour, Kristina presents plans for Global Flora: transforming the five major houses of the Ferguson Greenhouse complex into an innovative display of plants from around the world, incorporating aesthetics, sustainable design, and new areas for plant study.  Co-sponsored by Wellesley College Alumnae of Boston and the Wellesley College Botanic Garden Friends.  Free for WCAB and WCBG members, non-members $15.  Register by calling 781-283-3094, or email wcbgfriends@wellesley.edu.

  • Through January 15, 2012 – Global Flora: Botanical Imagery and Exploration

    Global Flora: Botanical Imagery and Exploration, an exhibition linking the history of botanical imagery with the adventure of exploration and effects of globalization on our our contemporary world opened on October 19. On view through January 15, 2012 in the Morelle Lasky Levine ’56 Works on Paper Gallery at Wellesley College, the exhibition is free and open to the public. To complement the exhibition, the Davis will present an Interdisciplinary Gallery Walk (November 9). According to Elaine Mehalakes, Kemper Curator of Academic Programs and curator of Global Flora, the 28 works in this exhibit — from engravings that date back to the 1500’s to contemporary still lifes — are not only exquisitely detailed depictions of flora and fauna, but also tell a story about the complex relationships that have evolved alongside botanical art. Drawn from the Davis collections and Wellesley College Library’s Special Collections, the prints and illustrated books on view also demonstrate the changes from the 16th century to the present in techniques used to depict botanical imagery—from woodcuts, engravings, and mezzotints to lithographs, cyanotypes, and inkjet prints; from the hand-colored to the color printed; and from the compact to the lavishly outsized. They display variations in format and purpose, though with equal attention given to accuracy, from floral still lifes imbued with symbolic meaning to precise depictions of individual plants with their component parts labeled for scientific classification.  For hours and more information, visit https://www.davismuseum.wellesley.edu/news/4123.  Below is Isabella Kirkland’s “Trade.”