“A Story” (1966), Kenzo Okada, with
floral arrangement by the Chestnut Hill Garden Club.

“Artificial Rock #85” (2005), Zhan Wang, with floral arrangement by the
Community Garden Club of Duxbury.

“La Baker” (1977), Loïs
Mailou Jones, with floral arrangement by the Osterville Garden Club.
Spring emerges at MFA
Spring was a tease last weekend, with a sublime Saturday and downpours before and after. A more reliable celebration of spring was indoors, at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, where the museum’s 42nd annual “Art in Bloom” brought floral magic to works of art throughout the museum from April 28 to April 30.
Each year in late April, “Art in Bloom” takes over the entire museum, drawing thousands of visitors to enjoy floral arrangements devised by more than 50 New England garden clubs. Months in advance, the clubs select works of art and design floral arrangements to highlight their chosen subject — a piece of furniture, a sculpture, a painting, even a costume.
The event began on Friday evening with a members’ preview and continued through Monday with activities that included classes and lectures by guest floral design experts, guided tours, and family-friendly artmaking activities and musical performances.
Among the garden club installations were traditional arrangements that combine artifice with nature, incorporating dry elements such as bamboo, synthetic materials and wooden inserts into formal works that are much admired by garden club cognoscenti.
Some clubs create fresh, living floral arrangements that bring a light and vivid sense of the season to their chosen works, drawing a viewer’s attention both to the bouquet and the art object, and inviting viewers to experience the art in a new way.
Two such pairings were in the MFA’s contemporary art galleries, where an exhibition entitled “Seeking Stillness” presents a collection of works conducive to contemplation.
A
gleaming tower of chromeplated stainless steel by Chinese artist Zhan
Wang, “Artificial Rock #85” (2005) is a somewhat ironic take on a
traditional Chinese scholar’s rock, a home-size meditative object that
evokes the distorted formations in a mountain cliff. The Community
Garden Club of Duxbury echoed the sculpture’s scale and grandeur in a
delicate arrangement composed of flowers that a monk might find on a
mountain path. Moss-covered branches extended its height, and sprigs of
small buds translated the sculpture’s bulk into an airy equivalent.
Pastel hues
Evoking
the soft hues and hints of natural forms in the lyrical abstract
painting “A Story” (1966), by Japanese-American artist Kenzo Okada, was a
bouquet by the Chestnut Hill Garden Club. Spikes of pine reflected the
linear shapes in Okada’s painting while framing the pastel flowers.
Another
pair of captivating flower-and-painting duets was in the Art of the
Americas wing. In the Saundra B. and William H. Lane Galleries, Georgia
O’Keeffe’s “Fishhook from Hawaii No. 2” (1939) is a serene semi-abstract
painting inspired by the New Mexican artist’s visit to Hawaii. The
Weymouth Garden Club accompanied the painting with an arrangement of
delphinium, ginger, orchids and other flowers. Its burst of red mimicked
the scarlet feather of the lure; a row of carnations repeated the
pinkhued horizon that crosses the oceanic blue panel in the painting, in
which the round sphere of the lure floats like a looking glass,
heightening the separation of sky and sea.
Exuberant color
Dominating
the John Axelrod Gallery, which features works by African-American
artists, is “La Baker” (1977), by Loïs Mailou Jones. While living
“shackle-free” in Paris, Boston-born Jones befriended expatriate singer
and dancer Josephine Baker, who also found liberation in Paris, along
with international renown. The Osterville Garden Club
captured
the exhilaration of the artist’s tribute to Baker with its bold
patterns, sleek, minimalist dancing figures and exuberant, earth-toned
palette. Bird of paradise, calla lilies, orchids, anthurium and other
blossoms reflected the painting’s feast of color, and angular leaves
echoed the strong lines in its African motifs.
The
MFA’s celebration of spring extends outdoors, in its contemplative
Japanese rock garden, Tenshin-En (Garden of the Heart of Heaven), where
flowering dogwoods and cherry trees are in bloom.
ON THE WEB
For more information about “Art in Bloom,” visit: www.mfa.org/programs/series/art-in-bloom