Inside The New York Botanical Garden

Herbals

Will the Real Elizabeth Blackwell Please Stand Up?

Posted in Around the Garden, Exhibitions, From the Library, People on July 1 2013, by Joyce Newman

Curious Herbal FrontispieceWho is Elizabeth Blackwell? If you Google the name, you’ll see that in 1849 she was the first woman to receive a U.S. medical degree, opening the profession to women. But look again. An Englishwoman with the same name was also the first woman to create the illustrated medical text, A Curious Herbal (at right), which was published in 1737, and she too had a huge impact on the practice of medicine.

The extraordinary story of this talented Englishwoman and botanical artist, Elizabeth Blackwell (c. 1700-1758), is part of the Herbals exhibit now on display in the Rondina and LoFaro Gallery of the NYBG’s Mertz Library.

Blackwell’s illustrations deeply impressed many English physicians, botanists, and apothecaries in mid-18th century London where the tradition of the herbal endured longer than it did on the continent. In England the herbals were a close second to the Bible in popularity. And Blackwell’s work was not only unprecedented for a woman of her time, but revealed the grim circumstances she faced as a wife and mother.

Her free-wheeling husband, Alexander, who practiced as a physician, was in debtor’s prison due to a failed, shady business operation. So Elizabeth was desperate to earn money to support her young child and to get him released.

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Humble Turnip Stands Tall at Mertz Library Gallery

Posted in Exhibitions, From the Library on June 19 2013, by Joyce Newman

Joyce H. Newman holds a Certificate in Horticulture from The New York Botanical Garden and has been a Tour Guide for over seven years. She is the former editor of Consumer Reports GreenerChoices.org.


TurnipA fascinating showcase of rare, stunningly illustrated books—dating from medieval and Renaissance times—is now open to the public in the Rondina and LoFaro Gallery at the Mertz Library.

Dozens of amazing works on display, called “Herbals,” contain some of the earliest ever recorded descriptions of plants in Western civilization, written by European botanists, physicians, historians, and clergy. Exhibitions Coordinator Mia D’Avanza explains how the exhibit was first conceived more than two years ago.

“There is a curatorial team from the Library that changes with each show, and often we choose a knowledgeable curator from outside the Garden who is an expert in the subject of that exhibition…. Our curator for this show, Lucia Tongiorgi Tomasi, an art historian at Italy’s University of Pisa, advised us as we chose works from the Library’s collection and described their significance.”

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