Renaissance Center Garden Opens

RenStuGdn1Last week I read a news story on the UMass website about a student project at the Renaissance Center: under the direction of Professor John Gerber, Stockbridge School students raised historic fruit trees and vegetables for a full-scale sixteenth century kitchen garden on the Center’s grounds.  Director Arthur Kinney had first envisioned the project, and Mount Holyoke graduate Jennie Bergeron did most of the research to choose the plant varieties and plot the areas for the herbs and vegetables.

I had been to the Center earlier this year to attend a lecture, so I knew I could walk there from my office in twenty minutes.  “Today is the day I’ll visit,” I said to myself this morning, and as soon as lunch hour rolled around, I set out.  Fortunately for me, Jennie herself was working in the garden when I arrived, so I had my own private tour of the space.  It really was fascinating to hear about what she had learned about  the gardens of ordinary people living some 400 years ago.

Jennie told me that she tried to create a common kitchen garden, with crops such as garlic and onions, root vegetables such as carrots and turnips, fava beans for protein,  and other food plants that were staples in the Northern European climate.  In this garden, she said, there are more herbs than vegetables, including ones familiar to us today, such as hyssop, horehound, angelica, anise, tansy, yarrow, and coriander.

I was particularly interested in hearing about the hops and the fruit that is planted here.  These are particularly rare heirloom varieties, and I think it would be interesting to actually taste the fruit and drink beer made from the hops.

The project is ongoing.  For example, the students are working on building a wattle fence around the garden, as you can see in one of the photos below.

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The garden is geometrically designed.

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You can see some of the vegetables in this photo.

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In the background are young apple trees.

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This is the beginning of a wattle fence, made of hawthorn branches.

Note that the Renaissance Center will be holding an Open House on Saturday, August 17th, from 10 am to 3 pm; the street address is 650 East Pleasant Street in Amherst.  Turn down the dirt driveway to park near the main building.  The garden will be on your left.

Art in Elm Park

Yesterday afternoon was the opening reception for Art in the Park in Worcester.  I was so tired by the end of the day that I couldn’t drag myself out of the house, but this morning I felt a lot more energetic and decided to drive to Elm Park to view the sculptures.  It was a good decision: it was sunny but not too hot, and there were only a few people out and about, even between noon and 1 pm.  I spent about an hour wandering through the Park and looking at the art work.  In fact, I photographed every piece.  Enjoy the show!

Day's End by James Kitchen

Day’s End by James Kitchen

Red Ball by Heinz Aeschlimann

Red Ball by Heinz Aeschlimann

Source by Margot Stage/Linda Hoffman

Source by Margot Stage/Linda Hoffman

Nearly Everyone Articulates That It Is Approximately Vast, Particularly on Earth by Christopher Lavery

Nearly Everyone Articulates That It Is Approximately Vast, Particularly on Earth by Christopher Lavery

Dancing Milkweed IV by David Boyajian

Dancing Milkweed IV by David Boyajian

One Disassembled Tree Reassembled Tree by Nicholas Kantarelis

One Disassembled Tree Reassembled Tree by Nicholas Kantarelis

Old Time Music "Better Than It Sounds" by Susu Wing

Old Time Music “Better Than It Sounds” by Susu Wing

Fruits of Fancy by Philip Marshall

Fruits of Fancy by Philip Marshall

Sentinels by Peter Dellert

Sentinels by Peter Dellert

ReinCARnation Hubcap Lily Pads by Susan Champeny, adopted by Nora Keil

ReinCARnation Hubcap Lily Pads by Susan Champeny, adopted by Nora Keil

Cocoon I by Denis Folz

Cocoon I by Denis Folz

Vascellum by Drew Goerlitz

Vascellum by Drew Goerlitz

Navis by Drew Goerlitz

Navis by Drew Goerlitz

Templum II by Drew Goerlitz

Templum II by Drew Goerlitz

Gathering by Gary Orlinsky

Gathering by Gary Orlinsky

Big Mug by Sarah Williams

Big Mug by Sarah Williams

Art in the Park 2013 is the first biennial and the fifth-year celebration of these large-scale public art works in Worcester’s historic Elm Park.  According to the website, this is a juried show; Anna Stothart, Curatorial Associate at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston, large-scale Boston sculptor Murray Dewart, and John Ventimiglia, Professor Emeritus of Sculpture and Drawing at Maine College of Art, selected works from eighteen artists, both local and national, for the three-month installation.

And now a word from the sponsor: Art in the Park

is presented in partnership with the City of Worcester’s Parks Department and ArtsWorcester along with the fiscal sponsorship of the Arts and Business Council, Inc. The program is supported in-part by a grant from the Worcester Arts Council, a local agency supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council and Greater Worcester Community Foundation.