Posts Tagged ‘Perennial Garden’
Morning Eye Candy: P.O.V.
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on July 21st, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentMorning Eye Candy: Friday’s Finery
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on July 20th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentPleasant things for a pleasant Friday. Even though we’re probably looking at a bank of rainclouds throughout the day, we kind of needed the downpour–and it’s still a Friday. Yesterday’s overcast skies, while threatening, left us with hours of easy breezes and popping color from the flowers, so maybe we’ll fare as well this afternoon.
Got any plans for the weekend?
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Morning Eye Candy: Filled Out
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on July 8th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentPast in Focus: Change of Plans
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on June 28th, 2012 by Matt Newman – 1 Comment
Back in January, I began posting photos in a new series tentatively titled “Past in Focus.” I had an aim of seeking out archived Garden images and recreating those scenes as they exist now–to see in today’s landscape hints of the last century. The photographers and I made the decision to wait until the NYBG was in its full spring growth to set out, though; we figured the pictures would carry more drama and gravity if the contrasts ran high, and now that everything is lush and lively, we come to find out that our well-meaning plan wasn’t quite feasible the way we envisioned it.
Last week, Ivo, Mark and I set out with tripods, cameras, a stack of lenses and a crumpled sheaf of old photo copies in hand. I’m not exactly Man Ray, so the other two did the hard work while I tagged along as a notebook-wielding nuisance; certainly they knew the ins and outs of the Garden’s layout better than I did at this point. After only 10 or 20 minutes and a few head-scratching shuffles around the front of the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory, we were already stymied. Not only were the spring trees too leafy in places for us to tie in many of the landmarks seen in the original photographs, but the actual landscape of the Garden had changed. Hills had been raised, pathways rerouted, new collections added.
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Morning Eye Candy: Poetry and the Art of the Perennial Garden
Posted in Monet's Garden, Photography on June 4th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentMallarmé and Rimbaud live here. Their words, at least. Monet’s Garden, beyond Giverny, is about exploring Impressionism as a movement, dipping into the lyricism of the era’s Symbolist poets. You’ll find selections from some of Monet’s gifted contemporaries placed throughout the Perennial Garden.
Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Morning Eye Candy: Solitary Refinement
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on February 22nd, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentAmbiance in a garden setting isn’t achieved only through an abundance of flowers, you know.
Perennial Garden — Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Morning Eye Candy: Subject of a Mad Collector
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on February 6th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentSnowdrops are springing up in abundance at the Perennial Garden, though you wouldn’t guess from their humble white petals that such an unassuming species is the subject of a newfound global obsession. “Galanthophiles” around the world are gearing up for snowdrop conventions that will draw thousands of fanciers from all corners this year. Maybe you’ll empathize with their enthusiasm.
Galanthus — Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
What’s Beautiful Now: Winter Strolls
Posted in What's Beautiful Now on January 13th, 2012 by Matt Newman – Be the first to commentGloves, hat, scarf–I brought none of these things when I went wandering the Garden during lunch yesterday. The climate was just so perfectly suited to a stroll. And the greatest benefit of working at the NYBG is that–no matter the climate–there’s something out on the grounds worth visiting. It’s true there’s no luck of a permanent spring with buds and blooms sprouting up from corner to corner, but winter has its own subtle and touching charm.
This season’s odd patterns of sun and darkness make for confusing daytime walkabouts; I hadn’t expected to step out of the office at 3 p.m. only to find dusk creeping along at the edges of the afternoon. Adjusting to this kind of Norse winter is a slow process. (Being a southerner, anything north of Georgia is practically Norway to me.) But I decided that I was already out and about, and despite the settling dark I was going to soak up as much enjoyment as I could from the remains of the day.
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