Walruses at the Coney island Aquarium
Continuing the series. Green is good. Green is life. Lots of green.
Related posts:
[Updated 2007.04.07 14:30 EDT: Added photos from the Rock Garden.]
[Updated 2007.04.07 11:30 EDT: Began adding photos to this post, and added more photos to the map.]
Screenshot of my Google Map of my visit to BBG on Forsythia Day
The post title and the image above are linked to my first attempt at using the new MyMaps feature of Google Maps. Let me know if/how it works for you. Is this annoying? Helpful? Interesting? Too geeky? Too slow?
The path shows the route I took, roughly, through BBG the day of my visit. Most of the areas and placemarks on the map along the way contain photos. The photos in turn are linked to their Flickr pages. You can also just browse the Flickr set of photos from my visit.
Here are some of the photos from my visit.
Forsythia Distribution
Rock Garden
I did get to see the Rock Garden as I had planned. I wasn’t disappointed. I don’t usually get to see this garden. It just seems off the beaten path during my usual visits. I want to visit it more often.
Other images
With Spring ramping up, and Hanami upon us, this seems as good a time as any to let folks know about the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitors (BBGV) group and photo pool on Flickr. Here’s the original description from Paul-M, who started the group:
Pictures taken at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. This is not affiliated with the garden. I’m just a lover of the place. There is a 12 picture per day maximum.
– About Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitors
I’m a co-administrator. The group is open to anyone for viewing, and open to any Flickr user for contributing. Contributors retain all rights.
Here is a Flickr HTML badge sampling photos from BBGV. I also have a Flash badge for the group in the sidebar.
I encourage everyone visiting the Brooklyn Botanic Garden this Spring to share their photos!
Marine Grill Murals (1/6), depicting Native Americans in canoes rowing out to greet a schooner.
A: They’re rat-infested, crowded, dirty, smelly, and noisy enough to deafen a banshee. However, they are safer than they used to be. And they have magnificent tilework from the golden age of public transportation.
Q: What are the subways?
I work in downtown Manhattan. I remember when these tile murals were installed in the Broadway-Nassau Subway Station, astonished when they were revealed. These murals are unusual, even for the subway: they were not originally designed for or located in the subway. They’re also an object lesson in preservation: they were almost lost forever to residential conversion:
The 1913 Marine Grill murals by Fred Dana Marsh, now installed in the Fulton/Broadway/Nassau complex, were originally in a basement restaurant of the McAlpin Hotel on Herald Square. The developer converting the hotel to condos agreed at the last minute to preserve them. While the workers managed to remove most of the ceramic tiles without breaking them, they simply piled them at random in two dozen crates. MTA Arts for Transit had the crates delivered to a TA bus garage with some free floorspace, and a group of college interns spent their summer playing jigsaw puzzle! They were reinstalled at Broadway/Nassau in 2000.
– Artwork: Marine Grill Murals, 1913, www.nycsubway.org
Marine Grill Murals (2/6), depicting pilgrims arriving at a Dutch settlement on the shore, complete with windmill and hangings.
A 1990 article from the New York Times provides more background:
A collection of colorful terra cotta wall panels designed by the late muralist Fred Dana Marsh that depict New York City’s nautical heritage is looking for a new home. For over 40 years the 24 panels were the backdrop for the 250-seat Marine Grill at the McAlpin Hotel on Herald Square, which opened in 1912 and between World Wars was one of the city’s more fashionable restaurants.
…
Preservationists failed in a bid to have the restaurant designated by the Landmarks Preservation Commission but the wall tiles may be saved if a museum or historically oriented group can use them at a new location.– POSTING: From the McAlpin; Nautical Tiles, Anyone?, By Richard D. Lyons, Published: January 21, 1990
Marine Grill Murals (3/6), appears to depict a British Man-o-War firing cannons in New York Harbor.
A 2001 article, also from the Times, follows up after the murals were installed in the subway:
It would have been hard for Susan Tunick, president of the Friends of Terra Cotta, to imagine a happy ending a decade ago [ie: 1991 or so, shortly after the above NY Times article was written] when she saw dumpsters at the McAlpin Hotel on Herald Square filled with fragments from the fabulously ornate Marine Grill murals of 1912 by Fred Dana Marsh. “It was truly devastating,” she recalled. “I could not go near it.”
That is not where the story ended, however. A rescue effort began that eventually involved the New York Landmarks Conservancy, the Municipal Art Society, the Landmarks Preservation Commission and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
…
Students working under Vel Riberto of the M.T.A. Arts for Transit program reassembled the jumbled pieces, which were turned over for conservation to the Alan M. Farancz Painting Conservation Studio and then reinstalled by New York City Transit workers as part of the overall renovation of the station.“Something about this terra cotta brought out the best every person had to offer,” said Sandra Bloodworth, director of Arts for Transit. “It was the opportunity to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.” The project cost about $200,000.
– POSTINGS: Rescued McAlpin Hotel Murals From 1912 Find a Home in the Subway; For Terra Cotta, Terra Firma, By David W. Dunlap, Published: April 29, 2001
Marine Grill Murals (4/6), depicting Robert Fulton’s steamboat Clermont (1808).
Marine Grill Murals (5/6), depicting the Mauretania (1906).
Marine Grill Murals (6/6), depicting the Fall River Line steamboat COMMONWEALTH in 1908.
It’s also nice to see these murals show up in a visualization of the redesigned Fulton Street Transit Center, the construction of which has been disrupting traffic above and below ground for the past two years:
Fulton Street Transit Center: A view east to the A/C mezzanine, which will improve connections to the J/M/Z platforms. Credit: LowerManhattan.info. Source.
I found some more information, including descriptions of what’s depicted in each mural, in This Week in New York. This helped me make out as best I can what’s depicted in each mural:
The landmarked terra-cotta murals, designed by Fred Dana Marsh, reveal the history of New York harbor, making their 2000 move to this downtown station near the water rather sensible. The murals depict Native Americans rowing out in canoes to greet a large schooner, pilgrims landing on the shore (look for the Dutch windmill and the two people being hanged), Robert Fulton’s Clermont steamer, a luxury liner sailing in front of the more modern New York City skyline, and lots of other ships bearing a multitude of international flags. In addition to the murals (of which there were originally twenty at the McAlpin), the intricately carved ironwork entrance gate to the restaurant is on display as well.
– Exposed bodies and marine murals at the Seaport [Note: Skip past the gruesome photos preserved Chinese prisoners bodies from the Bodies exhibit.]
Ironwork gate from the Marine Grill Restaurant, Broadway-Nassau Subway Station
I can find little information about the artist. Although a Google search turns up hundreds of hits, most of them simply duplicate the same information. He was born in 1872 and died in 1961. There is a Fred Dana Marsh Museum in Tomoka State Park in Ormond Beach, Florida, near Daytona Beach.
Links:
Rudbeckia, from North Carolina Arboretum, October 2006
Continuing the rainbow series. Previous posts were pink, red and orange. I need to finish the series in time to prepare some cards to hand out at the Brooklyn Blogfest in May. Indigo is going to be tough; I might skip it, go straight to purple/violet, and come back to indigo later.
Eranthis hyemalis, Winter Aconite, from Finally, Spring, March 2
Canada Lily, from Brooklyn Botanic Garden, June 2006
Death in the Garden, from Marie’s Garden, August 2006
Rope Ball, from Waterfront Museum, March 12
Chelidonium majus, Greater Celandine, June 2006
Skip is a Verb, from the Children’s Aid Society
At her invitation, this afternoon I took some pictures of one of my neighbors, Mary-Lou, with her dog, Spunky. Visit my Flickr site for the complete set.
Anthurium infructescence with fruits, from BBG, March 3
The third of eight in a series. Pink and Red preceded. Yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet/purple will follow.
Leaves on a shrub in the mixed border at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, from Brooklyn Botanic Garden, November 6, 2005
Trumpet Vine, from South Midwood Garden Tour, July 30, 2006
Butternut Squash, from Squash and Pear Soup, October 7, 2006
Maple Trees, from The 2006 New York Sheep & Wool Festival
Leaves on Rugby Road in Prospect Park South
Lily Pool Terrace, from BBG, November 4, 2006
Hibiscus, from South Midwood Garden Tour, July 30, 2006
The second of eight installments on the way to creating a photographic rainbow to use as a banner for the blog and other branding opportunities. Pink was the first, and there will be six more: orange, yellow, green (easy!), blue, indigo (tough!) and violet/purple.
“Red” turned out to be harder for me to define than “Pink”. It’s not a simple color. There are so many different flavors of red. Of course, there’s the brilliant, vibrant, almost crimson that screams RED, like the Hibiscus.
There are less saturated reds, like brick red:
Front Porch Detail, from The Front Garden Evolving, January 24, 2007
Some leaves:
Virgina Creeper, from North Carolina Arboretum, October 9, 2006
And even algae:
Algae Pool in Rock, from North Carolina Arboretum Bonsai House, October 9, 2006
I’m having a particularly hard time figuring out where red leaves off and orange begins:
Cormorant on Torii in the Japanese Garden, from Brooklyn Botanic Garden, April 23, 2006
Maple Tree, 91 Marlborough Road
There are many more flavors of red in the Flickr photo set, so be sure to visit there, too.
[Updated: Added captions and links to previous blog posts.]
I’ve been thinking about creating a banner for the blog which I can use for “branding” opportunities such as calling cards. I want to create a composite image from my photographs which recreates the rainbow of curtains across the front of the house.
The original design for the gay pride flag had eight colors: pink, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and purple. (Only a gay man would insist on including “indigo” in the rainbow!) My first task is to collect photographs for each color. This is the first installment: Pink.
Beetle on Rose, from Field Trip to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, July 8, 2006.
Cherry Blossoms, from Field Trip to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, April 23, 2006.
Bee on Echinacea, from South Midwood Garden Tour, July 30, 2006.
Phlox, from Marie’s Garden, Saratoga, NY, August 26, 2006.
Allamanda cathartica “Cherries Jubilee”, from North Carolina Arboretum
Sunset, from Halloween 2006.