Every Tree Tells a Story: Photography Exhibition on View at Center for Contemporary Art in Newark

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Every Tree Tells a Story: Photography Exhibition on View at Center for Contemporary Art in Newark
Olmsted Parks and Parkways, Louisville, KY. Photo © Bob Hower, courtesy the Cultural Landscape Foundation.



NEWARK, NJ.- The Cultural Landscape Foundation’s (TCLF) 2010 Landslide: Every Tree Tells a Story traveling photography exhibition featuring 25 images of 12 different locations in the US and Puerto Rico, begins at Aljira, a Center for Contemporary Art in Newark, NJ, November 4, 2010 and runs through January 8, 2011. Landslide, first issued in 2003, is TCLF’s annual compendium of significant at‐risk parks, gardens, horticultural features, and working landscapes and each year is accompanied by a traveling exhibition of commissioned photography. The 2010 Landslide: Every Tree Tells a Story focuses on the irreplaceable trees and tree groupings, often associated with historically important people and events that have shaped the development of communities and cultures. Russell Hart, executive editor at American Photo magazine, commissioned this year’s photography, and the November/December 2010 edition of American Photo features Landslide site images. Long time supporter Garden Design magazine returns for the 2010 Landslide, The Davey Tree Expert Company joins as Presenting Sponsor and American Forests as a sponsor.

The traveling photography exhibition features sentinel and specimen trees, allées and boulevards, urban forests, formal and vernacular— things that surround us and are living reminders of our heritage. These trees and tree groupings recall our nation’s past and have the potential to bear witness to coming generations. These natural and living features command the same awe and admiration that our culture bestows upon the arts, architecture and design. The 2010 Landslide: Every Tree Tells a Story sites are (alphabetical by location):

Aoyama Tree ‐ Los Angeles, CA
The 60 by 70‐foot Moreton Bay Fig tree (Ficus macrophylla) marks the former location of the Koyasan Daishi Mission, one of the city’s oldest and largest Buddhist temples. The tree, nearly 100 years old, stands as a living symbol of the city’s cultural and historical development of Buddhism and the Japanese American community. Photography by Robert Glenn Ketchum.

Arborland Tree Farm ‐ Milliken, CO
This orderly forest inhabited by diverse wildlife is actually a 150‐acre tree farm filled with a mixture of shade and ornamental trees and conifers. The farm’s dense canopy is an anomaly in this plains area along the South Platte River. Photography by Jay Dickman.

Tulip Poplar ‐ Tudor Place, Washington, DC
Tudor Place, built in 1805, has a beautiful collection of specimen trees on its 5‐½ acre property but there is one in particular that shines brighter than the rest. A tulip poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera), which stands more than 80‐feet tall with a diameter of 60 inches, has been present since the founding of Washington, DC as a small port city in the 18th century. Each passing year brings another chance for danger whether it is from shifting weather patterns, changes in urban development, or from environmental effects. Photography by Amy Bedik.

Cummer Oak ‐ Cummer Museum of Art, Jacksonville, FL
In the 1890s, when the Cummer family settled on the banks of the St. Johns River, this Live Oak tree (Quercus virginiana) was already majestic. Since that time, it has grown to 80‐feet tall with a 138‐foot span and has witnessed the garden’s evolution from O.C. Simonds’ picturesque 1903 gardens to the formal English and Italian gardens designed by Thomas Meehan & Sons, Ellen Shipman, and the gardens’ owner, Ninah Cummer. Photography by Larry Nighswander.

Sycamore Row ‐ Ames, IA
Professor of Horticulture A.T. Erwin planted this linear feature of almost 50 Sycamore trees (Platanus occidentalis) in the early 1900s parallel to the Ames‐to‐Campus railway at Iowa State University. While the tracks for the old steam engine and electric trolley have since disappeared, the trees continue to mark the historic transportation route used by countless Midwestern pioneers. Photography by David Jordano.

Olmsted Parks and Parkways ‐ Louisville, KY
This system consists of three flagship parks (Cherokee, Shawnee, and Iroquois) and the six parkways that connect them, all designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr. and his sons. For more than three decades, the Olmsted firm shaped the city—18 parks and 14.5 miles of boulevards in all—each designed in deference to natural topographic attributes. Today some 6,000 trees from the Olmsted design era provide the city its mature tree canopy. Photography by Bob Hower.

Commonwealth Avenue Mall ‐ Boston, MA
Initially laid out in Arthur Gilman’s 1850s plan for the Back Bay neighborhood, the original nine‐block mall was begun in 1876 and completed in 1881 (with additional sections designed over subsequent decades). The original portion links the Boston Common and Public Garden to Boston’s famed Emerald Necklace and stands as a premiere example of a tree‐lined avenue. Photography by James Sheldon.

Boxed Pines ‐ Weymouth Heights, Southern Pines, NC
Hundreds of Longleaf Pine trees (Pinus palustris), scattered throughout the subdivision, are marked with carvings, known as boxes, made by former slaves and their descendants to collect sap for turpentine, pitch, and rosin. In 1904, industrialist James Boyd purchased the land and landscape architect Alfred Yeomans incorporated the old‐growth trees into his design for the Weymouth Heights subdivision. Photography by Frank Hunter.

Japanese Flowering Cherry Trees – Essex County Branch Brook Park, Newark, NJ
Conceived by Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr. in 1867, the 360‐acre park was later redesigned by the Olmsted Brothers firm. The collection of Japanese Flowering Cherry trees (Prunus), established in 1928, numbers more than 4,000 today and rivals the more famous collection in Washington, DC’s Potomac Basin both in actual number and varieties. Photography by Yong Hee Kim.

Elms Of East Hampton ‐ East Hampton, NY
Founded in 1648, the village of East Hampton displays one of the nation’s finest small architectural and landscape ensembles. By 1895, its American Elm trees (Ulmus americana) were noted in print and, in 1920, were made famous by a Childe Hassam painting of the village. While disease and insects have threatened the trees, nearly 150 of the specimens continue to form a high, leafy canopy over the village streets. Photography by Garie Waltzer.

Black Oak Tree ‐ Katewood, Bratenahl, OH
Katewood, historically owned by the Holden family, today best known as the founders of the Holden Arboretum, is a Country Place era estate designed by A.D. Taylor. The Black Oak tree (Quercus velutina) that pre‐dates the house stands as a rare remnant of the area’s pre‐settlement era. Photography by Barbara Bosworth.

Río Piedras Ficuses ‐ San Juan, PR
Three African Cloth‐Bark trees (Ficus nekbuda) located along one of Puerto Rico’s busiest thoroughfares are approximately 50‐feet tall, with a 20‐foot total trunk diameter. Reminiscent of the farmsteads that once inhabited the region, their combined canopy stretches over seven lanes of highway and marks the entry point to Río Piedras and the greater and San Juan metropolitan area. Photography by Juan Pons.

“Each year’s ‘Landslide’ highlights different aspects of our landscape legacy, with the collective goal of making our living heritage visible,” said Charles A. Birnbaum, TCLF founder and President.

"These aren't just pretty pictures of old trees," says Russell Hart, executive editor at American Photo magazine. "They are important photographers' studies of unique specimens in context, from parklands to roadsides. Each of the 12 trees or groups of trees is seen through the lens of an artist's sensibility, in spectacular prints—and the images are as different as they could be."





Center for Contemporary Art | Newark | Every Tree Tells a Story: Photography Exhibition |





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