‘We have to create something to share’: Native plant garden and sculpture park in central Pa. ready to open
Updated 6:40 AM;
Facebook Share
On a warm, sunny spring day, Jane Allis eagerly points out newly sprouted plants poking through fallen, dry oak leaves.
“It’s been really exciting to see each one leaf out and emerge from its dormant state,” she said.
She has every reason to be excited – she planted 8,000 native plants, perennials and grasses at the Bower, which is the culmination of several years of work by her and her husband, Bill. It will open to the public on May 1.
Youth Triumphant sculpture in Barre
Two words that got used a lot in 2020 are resilience and pivot. The former is always a good thing; the latter we d be happy to dump in the vocabulary dustbin. Pivoting was what everyone on the planet was forced to do this year when the coronavirus arrived most definitely including the creative sector. The cancellations of performances and exhibitions, the closure of venues, and the loss of income for many artists and arts organizations were severe blows; we may not yet know the full extent of the effects.
In response, creatives got, well, creative. It didn t take long for nearly every kind of artist to reposition themselves online. Many learned recording and livestreaming skills and realized far-reaching opportunities; none of that will disappear when the virus does. Others repaired to the social-distancing-friendly outdoors think drive-in movies and concerts, Vermont Shakespeare Festival s