Tyrone Guthrie Centre, Annaghmakerrig |
Supergrover admiring the art in our Annaghmakerring bedroom |
Annaghmakerrig Lake |
The gardens here are aglow with dahlias |
Desk view, Annaghmakerrig |
Chestnuts |
Art in the hallway |
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The following is the latest newsletter from the Emily Dickinson Museum:
Architects' rendering of the rebuilt conservatory |
Emily Dickinson's
conservatory was removed in 1916. 100 years later, we're bringing it back. The
bedroom, the garden, the kitchen: all are essential spaces that quickly spring
to mind when thinking about the physical locations that inspired Dickinson's
poetry. The conservatory, built by her father when the family returned to the
Homestead in 1855, is another. In this diminutive greenhouse Dickinson
maintained her link to the vibrant natural world during the frigid New England
winters. She tended flowers "near and foreign," as she wrote to
Elizabeth Holland in March 1866, in a space six feet deep and seventeen feet
wide where she had "but to cross the floor to stand in the Spice
Isles."
The deep connection
between Dickinson and her horticultural pursuits permeated her poetry and daily
life. Imagine dirt under the poet's fingernails as she wrote the poems that
immortalized flowers blooming in her garden, home, and Amherst wilderness. The
conservatory allowed her to follow this passion year round. Through its
windows, Dickinson could view the gardens and orchard that she frequented in
the warmer months. From the native species and fragile exotic specimens she
grew inside would come the blooms and bouquets sent with letters and poems to
her beloved friends in even the coldest months of the year. To tell the
Dickinson story more fully we need to restore the conservatory.
1916 image of Emily's conservatory |
Dismantled in 1916,
many of the conservatory's original architectural elements - including its
window sash and original door - survive. In the past two years archaeological
investigations of the southeastern corner of the house where the conservatory
stood have unearthed its foundations and other important historical details.
With photographic, documentary, archaeological, and even poetic evidence in
hand, we're ready to bring Emily Dickinson's conservatory back to life. But
we'll need your help to do it.
Our fundraising goal
for reconstructing and maintaining the conservatory is $300,000, of which over
$100,000 has already been raised.
Since its founding in
2003, the Emily Dickinson Museum has undertaken several projects that provide
visitors with a more authentic understanding of the world inhabited by the
Dickinsons. The restoration of Emily Dickinson's bedroom and library, return of
the hedge and fence that connect the Homestead and Evergreens properties,
repainting of the homes in their historic colors, and, coming soon, an heirloom
orchard allow visitors to step back in time through a personal encounter with
the poet's world possible nowhere else. The conservatory will add another
critical detail to that immersive experience.
In her letter to Mrs.
Holland, Dickinson also wrote that "We do not always know the source of
the smile that flows to us." We hope that this project provokes many
joyful smiles among those who care about the Museum's mission of interpreting
and sharing the story of Emily Dickinson and her family. You can express a bit
of that joy by contributing to making the conservatory a reality. We thank you
in advance for your support of this latest step in returning the Museum grounds
to a place Emily Dickinson would have recognized and in which she would have
felt at home.
Donate to the
Conservatory Reconstruction Fund by contacting the development office at
413-542-5084 or development@EmilyDickinsonMuseum.org.
Or donate online here.
2 comments:
How lovely that you are there, retreating! Wish I was there with you - although with my rotten cold, I suspect it's best this way. Hoping to come next year. Work well, play well. xx
It's thanks to you, lovely! I'm so glad we arranged to meet here, so sad you couldn't make it. I am enjoying it and meeting the usual cohort of fabulous people. Get well soon, dearest. Next year, the pair of us, here. N x x xx
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