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Volume 10, Issue 10  |  October 2023
Secret Beauty by Lisa Snow Lady
Pseudotsuga menziesii by Lisa Snow LadyPlease join us at the Miller Library this month for Secret Beauty, a new exhibit. Seattle native Lisa Snow Lady’s acrylic paintings and layered paper collages feature Northwest flora and the pollinators these plants support. From the artist's statement:

I think there is a hidden or secret beauty imbedded in the plants that are native to a particular region. While my own small urban garden contains many non-native species I am starting to incorporate more of the smaller native plants into it in order to attract native birds and pollinators.

For this exhibit I have done research on the plants that are native to the Pacific Northwest, and in some cases a little beyond. They are not meant to be botanically accurate renditions [...] but rather artistic interpretations. I employed the medium of collage with cut and torn paper for a playful approach.

The exhibit is open during library hours. The artist is hosting a reception Saturday, October 7, from noon to 2:00 pm.
Tracking Giants by Amanda Lewis
Recommended by Priscilla Grundy

What would it be like to decide one day to visit all the biggest trees in your state, or, in this case, the province of British Columbia? Amanda Lewis takes us with her on this adventure. Her book blends humorous takes on her own incompetence, lots of information about Big Trees, quotations from multiple nature writers, and thoughtful consideration of personal growth.
 
The trees she sought are Champions, listed online by the province’s Big Tree Committee.  To make the list, a tree must have the highest score for its species in a calculation that combines measurements of its crown, its height, and its diameter at breast height. As Lewis, notes, searching for Champions is like squeezing Jello – trees grow; trees die by natural and human actions. They can be chopped down or simply demoted by discovery of a bigger tree. A Champion one day may be replaced the next.

Lewis is a book editor, but when she told a Big Tree Committee member her search plans, she was asked to report her measurements of each Big Tree she found. She had a lot to learn. At first she measured the diameter by hugging the tree. Later she became more adept.

Interspersed with narratives of the search are quotations from many nature writers, some recent, such as Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass and Rebecca Solnit’s  Orwell’s Roses. These, like many other of her sources, are part of the Miller Library collection.

Finding a tree, looking at it, and measuring it became over time insufficient for Lewis. She records how she learned to consider the tree’s environment, the history of the surrounding forest, the plants and animals nearby. Eventually she broadened her whole concept of the search itself.

All this is worth reading about. The writing is lively and clear. The parts are well integrated. Champions turn out to be a winning subject.
Hear the Miller Memorial Lecture by October 31
Sara Zewde, ASLA, Studio ZewdeBe sure to catch the 2023 Elisabeth Carey Miller Memorial Lecture webinar featuring Sara Zewde, Founding Principal of Studio Zewde. The theme of her talk is Ecologies of Memory, which are important intellectual frameworks and creative departures for landscape design today. She will discuss her ongoing research tracing Frederick Law Olmsted's travels and writings as a journalist documenting slavery as well as her design work with Studio Zewde in the context of a changing climate, rapid urban development, and clarified social and political tensions.

Studio Zewde was named among the Architectural Digest AD100 and a 2021 Emerging Voice by the Architectural League of New York, while the studio’s work is lauded for its design methodology that syncs site interpretation and narrative with a dedication to the craft of construction. The firm’s employees have multi-disciplinary backgrounds in landscape architecture, architecture, city planning, urban design, sociology, statistics, community organizing, and public art. Studio Zewde is devoted to creating enduring places where people belong.
Ask a librarian
The Miller Library's Plant Answer Line provides quick answers to gardening questions.
You can reach the reference staff at 206-UWPLANT (206-897-5268),
hortlib@uw.edu, or from our website, www.millerlibrary.org.
Digital resources
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detail from Deakin's Flora of the Colosseum of Rome, 1855  Miller Library book and flower logo
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