Open Saturday
November 20th, 2024 Filed under: Uncategorized |Comments Off on Open Saturday
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Comments Off on SOLD OUT Emerge Spring Exhibition Tour at Krohn
Celebrate the coming of spring with us as we enjoy a walking tour of the Krohn Conservatory’s Emerge exhibition.
Mark House will act as our guide through the exhibit as well provide history and information about the Krohn Conservatory.
Space is limited.
Sold Out.
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Comments Off on Houseplant Matchmaking Workshop
Have you previously found yourself unlucky in houseplant love? Join us at the Lloyd Library and Museum and let us help you find your perfect match! Choose from an assortment of plants and pots to create the ideal plant companion. Brandie Atkins, owner of Plant Therapy by Brandie, will guide us through potting and caring for houseplants with stories and simple tips. All workshop attendees will take home a 6-inch houseplant in a ceramic pot of their choice. Space is limited, so secure your spot now!
Registration required. $50 for workshop,$40 for members.
Plant Therapy by Brandie is a small business retailer that serves houseplant enthusiasts, from beginners to advanced! Our mission is to share plants and education to encourage friends, family, and beyond. Plant Therapy by Brandie accomplishes this through social media, selling plants at local pop-up market events, and providing workshops in the community. Brandie, the owner, is dedicated to growing an assortment of plants and providing personal attention. She believes that plants remind us of our humanity and the need for self-care. Taking time each day to support the survival of your houseplant pulls you out of the busyness of daily life. It highlights our need for water, sun, and fertilization—not only for our plants, but also for ourselves.
Comments Off on Green Spaces, Empire’s Traces: A Victorian History of Houseplant Horticulture
As coal consumption increased in nineteenth-century Britain, so did the need to innovate new forms of gardening that could protect plants from smoke and air pollution. Advances in glasshouse technology, along with the emergence of parlor and window horticulture, subsequently allowed the Victorians to cultivate miniature gardens within their homes. Over time, these spaces became showcases for elaborate collections of ornamental plants, many of which were sourced from Africa, Asia, and other regions tied to British colonialism. This talk will explore the Victorian history of houseplants, highlighting how indoor gardens entwined a growing desire for environmental renewal with the global politics of imperial expansion.
Lindsay Wells is an art historian and scholar of nineteenth-century Britain, with a focus on histories of empire, the environment, and plants. She earned her PhD in art history from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and has held recent postdoctoral fellowships at the Getty Research Institute and UCLA. Her essays on botany, art, and horticulture have appeared in Victorian Studies, Victorian Literature and Culture, and Literature Compass.
Comments Off on Welcome to My Jungle Opening Reception
From home décor to health, the virtues of houseplants are abundant. Beyond their ability to both enliven and calm our interiors, they act as natural air purifiers by releasing oxygen, absorbing carbon dioxide, and even removing cancer-causing chemicals from the air. But houseplants weren’t always so readily available to the casual cultivator. Previously the domain of the wealthy, houseplants’ popularity surged during the Victorian era when botanists collected tropical species that ended up in the living rooms of fashionable Europeans, creating an exotic plant and fern fever that transcended class and gender barriers. Welcome to My Jungle: In-door Plants will spotlight trends in houseplants from the last two centuries, with particular attention to British fern fever, German cactus curiosity, American midcentury decorating chic, and environmental and wellness movements driving interest today.
Free and open to the public. Light refreshments.
Comments Off on Holiday Open House
Slip away from the hectic activities of the holidays with a stop at the Lloyd Library & Museum. Experience peace and calm when visiting one of Cincinnati’s premier research libraries, explore Welcome to My Jungle and enjoy hot chocolate and cookies.