Research Catalog

Mark Dion : travels of William Bartram reconsidered / [an installation curated by Julie Courtney at Bartram's Garden].

Title
Mark Dion : travels of William Bartram reconsidered / [an installation curated by Julie Courtney at Bartram's Garden].
Author
Dion, Mark, 1961-
Publication
Philadelphia, Pa. : Bartram's Garden, c2008.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance N6537.D54 A4 2008Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
  • Courtney, Julie.
  • Bartram's Garden (Philadelphia, Pa.)
Description
111 p. : ill. (chiefly col.), maps; 23 x 30 cm.
Summary
"Mark Dion's 'Travels of William Bartram - Reconsidered' examined the history and culture of America's first great naturalists, botanists, and plant explorers, John Bartram (1699-1777) and his son, William Bartram (1739-1823). He loosely traced the expeditions of these 18th century American icons using their travel journals, drawings, and maps to create a unique project that was installed in the historic home of John Bartram. Bartram's Garden, a 45-acre site situated on the west bank of the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia is one of the city's hidden treasures. As an artist whose work blurs the boundaries between contemporary art, history, and science, Dion's deep respect and knowledge about the Bartram legacy in natural science and art, combined with his quirky perspective, made this project thoughtful and amusing. Dion retraced the exploratory journeys and expeditions of William Bartram, in particular, to northern Florida. He was most interested in William because he was an artist and had a lot of the characteristics of 21st century artists: had trouble getting and keeping a keeping a job, never married, and lived at home when he wasn't traveling with the Indians, etc. Most of the landscape that Bartram explored has been radically altered by the construction of shopping malls and golf courses. Dion, nevertheless, collected natural specimens and man-made artifacts, and, in keeping with his longstanding interest in mail art, sent them back to Bartram's Garden. These artifacts and specimens were installed in souvenir cabinets that Dion designed and had built by Pappajohn Woodworkers for the exhibit. One of the cabinets was a postcard cabinet that housed 36 hand-painted postcards depicting various things Dion saw: all sorts of plants and animals, a golf cart, Mickey Mouse, and 19th c. pottery shards. An inveterate flea marketer, archeologist, and naturalist, Dion sent back, among other things, herbarium specimens, fish preserved in alcohol, water samples, kitsch material culture from Florida (e.g. alligator salt and pepper shakers), and collections of toys, knives, shells and bottle caps, all artfully arranged in the manner of natural history museum displays. He collected plant specimens that were dried and mounted on tea-stained acid free paper and placed in a cabinet based on the designs of Linnaeus. The journey was documented by drawings, photographs, video and audio, and Dion's personal journal." Julie Courtney [http://www.juliecourtneyprojects.com/bartram.html]
Alternative Title
  • Travels of William Bartram reconsidered
  • Mark Dion
Subject
  • Dion, Mark, 1961- > Exhibitions
  • Bartram, William, 1739-1823 > Travel > Exhibitions
  • 2000-2099
  • Botanical illustration > Exhibitions
  • Botany in art > Exhibitions
  • Site-specific installations (Art) > Philadelphia > 21st century
  • Cabinets of curiosities > Exhibitions
  • Southern States > Discovery and exploration > Exhibitions
Genre/Form
  • exhibition catalogs.
  • Exhibition catalogs
  • Catalogues d'exposition.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 108-109).
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
ISBN
  • 9780615257488
  • 0615257488
LCCN
^^2008938331
OCLC
  • 320265263
  • SCSB-10373605
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library