Mark Dion staged an installation
inside the 18th century house at Bartram's Garden, a wonderful historic
treasure on the banks of the Schuylkill. The installation is right at home
here.
Here he has put on display quirky artifacts--from seeds to carcases to tourist kitsch--that Dion collected while following in naturalist William Bartram's footsteps through the south at the time the Revolutionary War was brewing, in the 1770s. William is the son of John Bartram, America's first native botanist and the original owner of the estate on the Schuylkill. The project was conceived an commissioned by Philadelphia curator Julie Courtney. (read more)
Here he has put on display quirky artifacts--from seeds to carcases to tourist kitsch--that Dion collected while following in naturalist William Bartram's footsteps through the south at the time the Revolutionary War was brewing, in the 1770s. William is the son of John Bartram, America's first native botanist and the original owner of the estate on the Schuylkill. The project was conceived an commissioned by Philadelphia curator Julie Courtney. (read more)
Artist Mark Dion has staged an installation inside the 18th century house at Bartram's Garden, a wonderful historic treasure on the banks of the Schuylkill. The installation is right at home here.
ReplyDeleteHere he has put on display quirky artifacts--from seeds to carcases to tourist kitsch--that Dion collected while following in naturalist William Bartram's footsteps through the south at the time the Revolutionary War was brewing, in the 1770s. William is the son of John Bartram, America's first native botanist and the original owner of the estate on the Schuylkill. The project was conceived an commissioned by Philadelphia curator Julie Courtney. http://artledger.com/node/642