NEW YORK, April 27 /CHICAGOPRESSRELEASE.COM/ — During her lifetime, Emily Dickinson was better known as a gardener than as a poet. Plants and flowers significantly influenced her poetry and other writings, most of which were not published until after her death. The spring exhibition at The New York Botanical Garden, Emily Dickinson’s Garden: The Poetry of Flowers, co-presented with the Poetry Society of America, is the most comprehensive and multifaceted exhibition about Dickinson’s life, gardens, and poetry ever mounted in the United States.
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20100427/NY94645)
A flower show in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory will feature a re-creation of Dickinson’s own mid-19th-century New England flower garden. On display will be Dickinson’s favorite plants and flowers, including daisies, daylilies, tulips, roses, lilies, jasmine, and many others, giving witness to how she may have felt in the surroundings that inspired so much of her poetry.
An exhibition of more than 50 fascinating objects—books, manuscripts, watercolors, and photographs telling the story of Emily Dickinson’s life—will be featured in the Gallery of the Mertz Library.
Emily Dickinson’s Poetry Walk, with over 30 poetry boards and audio messages featuring Dickinson’s poems and the plants and flowers that inspired her to write them, will take visitors through some of the Botanical Garden’s collections at the peak of the spring flowering season.
For more information, please visit http://www.nybg.org/emily.
For tickets and other information about The New York Botanical Garden, please call 718.817.8700 or visit www.nybg.org.
SOURCE The New York Botanical Garden