Tag: Zoom

  • Thursday, February 8, 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm Eastern – Art and Nature: New Lessons from Russell Page, Online

    Russell Page (1906-1985) was one of the most talented and celebrated landscape architects of the twentieth century, and his memoir, The Education of a Gardener, has become a classic. While Page is remembered for old-fashioned, formal designs, a closer look at his career reveals a more complicated, forward-looking artist who explored preservation, native plant groupings, and the beauty of wildness. With Page as a guide, Professor Caleb Smith asks: What is the role of the designer in shaping a living, natural landscapes? How can gardens become both wild spaces and works of art? The Garden Conservancy will sponsor this online talk on February 8 from 2 pm – 3 pm, live on Zoom. $5 for Garden Conservancy members, $15 general admission. A recording of this webinar will be sent to all registrants a few days after the event. We encourage you to register, even if you cannot attend the live webinar. Register at https://www.gardenconservancy.org/education/education-events/virtual-talk-art-and-nature-new-lessons-from-russell-page

    Caleb Smith is a professor of English and American Studies at Yale University. A scholar of cultural history, focusing on literature, religion, and the built environment, Smith’s books include The Prison and the American Imagination (2009) and Thoreau’s Axe: Distraction and Discipline in American Culture (2023). He has written about culture and the arts for Harper’s, n+1, and Los Angeles Review of Books, and his feature essay on the landscape designer Russell Page appeared in Aeon Magazine in fall 2023.

    For those wishing to learn more about Russell Page, we encourage you to explore his online archive hosted by the Garden Museum in London.

  • Sunday, January 21, 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm Eastern – Architects Respond to Nature: Frank Lloyd Wright and the Myth of the Prairie, Online

    Although architecture itself originated from a need for shelter from nature, modern humans retain the desire to live with nature around or near them—even in urban settings. Since the development of plate glass in the 17th century and mechanized heating and cooling in the late-19th and 20th, the relationship between architecture and nature has continually evolved to the point that architecture is now including or mimicking natural processes of decay and self-replication.

    Over the course of the last century, the work of two architectural giants, Frank Lloyd Wright and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, responded to nature in very different ways through their philosophies and approaches, influencing the work of other architects as well as builders and clients. Today’s architecture draws on the legacies of these groundbreakers, especially by integrating structures with the site, incorporating natural materials, or maximizing visual access to surrounding nature and the seasons.

    Frank Lloyd Wright is often associated with a Prairie School of architecture characterized by horizontal lines and abstract geometries that purportedly harmonized with the Midwestern landscape and advanced an American style of design.

    Jennifer Gray, vice president and director of the Taliesin Institute at the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, takes a closer look at this familiar story and explores how the myth of the prairie related to broad questions about colonization, immigration, and national identity that pervaded social and architectural discourse at the turn of the 20th century. This January 21 Zoom presentation is sponsored by Smithsonian Associates in collaboration with the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Edith Farnsworth House. Designed and built between 1946 and 1951, the Edith Farnsworth House was as a weekend retreat for prominent Chicago nephrologist, musician, and poet, Dr. Edith Farnsworth, as a place to relax, entertain, and enjoy nature. It is recognized as an iconic masterpiece of the International Style of architecture and has National Historic Landmark status. The architect was Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and this was his first and most significant domestic project in America. Located 58 miles southwest of Chicago, the glass and steel house is set within a natural landscape on a 62-acre parcel located along the Fox River. Learn more here. $20 for Smithsonian Associates members, $25 for nonmembers. Two additional sessions in February and March, on Mies van der Rohe and Beyond Sustainability, may be found at this link as well.

    A view from across reflecting pool of the Avery Coonley House by Frank Lloyd Wright, 1906–09 (Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University)

  • Monday, January 22, 7:00 pm Eastern – Visions of Panama: Commerce, Culture, and Biodiversity, Online

    What defines contemporary Panama? The Panama Canal, the global trade hub at the crux of North and South America, is just the beginning. Its people, a blend of Indigenous, Spanish, and other diverse ethnic influences, create a unique cultural tapestry. Nature thrives in Panama along two ocean coasts with more than 1,600 islands, two major mountain ranges, and more bird species than the United State and Canada combined.

    Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist Essdras M. Suarez—a native of Panama— leads a Smithsonian Associates visual tour that explores the country’s interplay of commerce, culture, and biodiversity in images that capture the deep connection between its inhabitants and their environment. Whether a trip to Panama is on your wish list or you’re simply curious about one of the Western Hemisphere’s most culturally and geopolitically critical nations, Suarez offers a personal and powerful picture of his homeland. The webinar will be presented on Zoom on January 22 at 7 pm Eastern. $25 for Smithsonian Associates members, $30 for nonmembers. Register at www.smithsonianassociates.org

  • Friday, January 12, 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm Eastern – North American Regional Gardening Approaches, Online

    Native plants are hot right now, and for good reason! Many gardeners recognize the importance of weighing aesthetics with ecological value in their horticultural practice, and they see the use of native plants as crucial to benefiting wildlife and humans alike. This American Horticultural Society talk explores the underlying concepts and approaches to using regionally appropriate native plants and how you can welcome native plants into your garden no matter where you live in North America. A recording will be made available to registrants for a limited time following the talk. $10 AHS members, $15 nonmembers. Register at https://ahsgardening.org/lifelong-learning/north-american-regional-gardening-approaches/

    UIi Lorimer is the Director of Horticulture for Native Plant Trust. He oversees the facilities and operations at Garden in the Woods and at Nasami Farm. Uli brings 20 years of experience working with native plants in public gardens with previous positions at Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Wave Hill Garden and the US National Arboretum. He is a tireless advocate for the use of native plants in designed spaces through his public speaking, writing, lectures and media appearances. Uli feels most grounded with his hands in the soil.

  • Tuesday, January 16, 5:00 pm Eastern – Seeing the Forest as the Key: Lumbermen, Foresters & Racial Power in the Early Twentieth-Century South & the West, Live and Online

    This Massachusetts Historical Society panel on January 16 at 5 pm examines the role of the environment in the United States during the early twentieth century and its relationship to colonialism. As a science largely employed by colonizing European powers at the turn of the twentieth century, forestry, Evan Bonney’s paper suggests, helped the United States claim the Intermountain West as part of its empire. Perri Meldon’s work centers on the Great Dismal Swamp, the wetland, once owned by George Washington. As promotional material illustrates, the swamp became less an actual wetland and more an imagined space imbued with revolutionary (and rebel) spirit. Yet the swamp’s ecology repeatedly resisted the visions of those who promoted it. Meldon’s essay documents the efforts of local officials, outdoors enthusiasts, and lumber companies to advertise the swamp and how the wetland evaded their goals.

    Register to attend in person

    Register to attend online

  • Tuesday, November 14, 5:00 am – 6:30 am Eastern – American Masters: Landscape and National Identity, Online

    The study of landscape design is essentially a study of human culture; the way people shape their environment reflects a sense of their place in the world. Traditionally western landscape design has veered between the Classic and Romantic traditions, pitting European formality against English naturalism. During the twentieth century however, these stylistic polarities gave way to new concerns as designers looked increasingly to the historical, political and cultural context of their sites. As the New World was often in the forefront of this movement, this Gardens Trust four-lecture series on American Moderns will examine key landscapes from the two continents, exploring the designs which pushed the boundaries of the profession by pioneering new approaches, reflecting new philosophies and challenging assumptions about the form, use and meaning of landscape. You may purchase tickets for the entire series through Eventbrite for £16, or individual sessions costing £5, at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/american-moderns-tickets-670807291667 Attendees will be sent a Zoom link 2 days (and again a few hours) prior to the start of the first talk (If you do not receive this link please contact us), and a link to the recorded session will be sent shortly after each session and will be available for 1 week.

    Week One on November 14 is Landscape and National Identity. Geoffrey Jellicoe once claimed that ‘All man-made environment is a projection of our psyche, whether individual or collective’. This lecture will explore how designers from different parts of the Americas – the Brazilian Roberto Burle Marx, the Mexican Luis Barragan and the American Thomas Church – used gardens and landscapes to shape and promote ideas of national identity. Wary of the European traditions of their country’s former colonial rulers, these designers looked to indigenous flora, building materials, architecture, agricultural methods, cultural traditions and mythologies to establish distinct, new approaches which reflect the national and local character of their sites. Image: Sítio Roberto Burle Marx, Rio de Janeiro. Halley Pacheco de Oliveira

    Speaker Katie Campbell is a writer and garden historian. She lectures widely, has taught at Birkbeck, Bristol and Buckingham universities; she writes for various publications, and leads art and garden tours. Her most recent book, Cultivating the Renaissance (Routledge, 2021) , explores the evolution of Renaissance ideas and aesthetics through the Medici Tuscan villas. Her previous book, British Gardens in Time (Quarto, 2014), accompanied the BBC television series. Earlier works include Paradise of Exiles (Francis Lincoln, 2009), looking at the late nineteenth century Anglo-American garden-makers in Florence, Icons of Twentieth Century Landscape Design (Frances Lincoln, 2006) and Policies and Pleasaunces (Barn Elms, 2007), a Guide to Scotland’s Gardens.

  • Thursday, June 15, 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm Eastern – American Wildflowers: A Literary Field Guide, Virtual Livestream

    Join editor Susan Barba for a mobile landscape reading of her new literary anthology, American Wildflowers: A Literary Field Guide, filled with classic and contemporary poems and essays inspired by wildflowers. What is a mobile landscape reading, you ask? Instead of presenting in an Arnold Arboretum lecture hall, Barba will bring participants through the wildflowers of the Arboretum to hear beautiful poems and prose among the wildflowers that inspired them. We will stop at different wildflowers highlighted in the book and listen as Barba reads passages about fireweed, chicory, or Solomon’s seal.

    You will receive a Zoom link upon registering. To register for the virtual event, click here.

    This event will also be presented in-person in the Arboretum landscape. To sign up for the in-person event, click here.

  • Thursday, June 15, 6:45 pm – 8:15 pm Eastern – The Three Ages of Water: Prehistoric Past, Imperiled Present, and a Hope for the Future, Online

    From the creation of the planet billions of years ago to the present day, water has always been central to existence on Earth. And since long before the mythical Great Flood, it has been a defining force in the story of humanity.

    Leading scientist and water expert Peter Gleick traces the long, fraught history of our relationship to this precious resource. Water has shaped civilizations and empires and driven centuries of advances in science and technology—from agriculture to aqueducts, steam power to space exploration—as well as progress in health and medicine. The Smithsonian Associates Zoom will take place June 15 at 6:45 pm.

    But the achievements that propelled humanity forward also brought consequences: unsustainable water use, ecological destruction, and global climate change. Gleick outlines how the lessons of the past can be the foundation of action designed to support a sustainable future for water and the planet.

    Gleick’s book, The Three Ages of Water: Prehistoric Past, Imperiled Present, and a Hope for the Future (PublicAffairs), is available for purchase. For details on that, and to register ($20 for Smithsonian Associates members, $25 for nonmembers), visit https://smithsonianassociates.org/ticketing/tickets/three-ages-of-water

  • Saturday, June 10, 5:00 pm Eastern – Hallelujah Hydrangeas! Sneak Peek at the Cape Cod Hydrangea Festival, Online

    Join C.L. Fornari on Zoom on June 10 at 5 pm for a celebration of Hydrangeas and a sneak preview of the Cape Cod Hydrangea Festival. Hear about some new varieties of Hydrangeas and tips for growing the best plants. Learn about some of the gardens that will be on tour in July. This webinar will give you an insider look at the Cape Cod Hydrangea Festival. Registration required. Click HERE.

  • Friday, May 26, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm Eastern – Magic in the Garden: Land Spirits, Shrine Building, and Sacred Gardening, Online

    Never let it be said that Boston Flora publishes only mainstream events. On Friday, May 26 at 7 pm, join Glasse Witch Cottage’s Friday Night Workshop Series on Zoom.

    The Green Ones are all around us and can be an incredible source of connection and nourishment. Learn to take your spirituality al fresco through tools and techniques for supporting a relationship with the local land spirits, evaluating the flow of energy in outdoor spaces, and shrine and garden construction and tending.

    This workshop will be recorded for folks who can’t make the Zoom in person, and sent out for download after the workshop concludes.

    The workshop fee is $15. Sliding scale ticket options of $5 and $10 are available for folks who face financial obstacles to attending the workshop. Register through Eventbrite HERE. Glasse Witch Cottage Friday Night Workshops are free for Patreon supporters.

    Irene Glasse is a mystic witch based in Western Maryland. She is a longtime teacher of witchcraft, meditation, and magick in the mid-Atlantic. She has performed, taught workshops, and led rituals at many festivals and conferences over the years, including but not limited to the Sacred Space Conference, EarthSpirit’s Twilight Covening and Rites of Spring, Fertile Ground Gathering, Free Spirit Gathering, the Shenandoah Midsummer Festival, and more. Irene is the main organizer of the Frederick Covenant of Unitarian Universalist Pagans (Frederick CUUPS), offering events, rituals, classes, and workshops to a large, vibrant community. She is the coauthor of Blackfeather Mystery School: The Magpie Training and blogs weekly at GlasseWitchCottage.com.