Panel Discussion: In Search of Thoreau’s Flowers

Geological Lecture Hall, 24 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138

Tickets available at the door.

$10 members/ $15 nonmembers

Free for Harvard ID holders

How can an imaginative fusion of art and science help us reach a meaningful understanding of the relationship between our actions, climate change, and diminishing biodiversity? This panel features the artists and scientists who collaborated in developing In Search of Thoreau’s Flowers, an exhibition now on view at the Harvard Museum of Natural History. The inspiration for this project was a set of 648 plant specimens in the Harvard University Herbaria that were collected by Henry David Thoreau at Walden Pond. Utilizing photography, botanical data, and digital art, the exhibition explores and visualizes the richness of plant diversity in eastern Massachusetts and reflects on how climate change continues to impact this diversity.

A wine and cheese reception will follow in the museum galleries.

Free parking at the 52 Oxford Street Garage.

Presented by the Harvard Museum of Natural History

Charles Davis, Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology & Curator of Vascular Plants, Harvard University Herbaria

Marsha Gordon, Professor, North Carolina State University

Emily Meineke, Assistant Professor, University of California, Davis

Leah Sobsey, Artist, Curator, Associate Professor of Photography, and Director of the Gatewood Gallery, University of North Carolina

Robin Vuchnich, Artist, UX Designer, Assistant Professor of the Practice, North Carolina State University

Moderated by Elena Kramer, Bussey Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology; Interim Director, Harvard University Herbaria, Harvard University

Woman looking at Thoreau exhibit
Immersive experience by artist, Robin Vuchnich, and cyanotype and gold leaf print on glass by artist, Leah Sobsey, feature Thoreau Herbarium specimens that are now locally extinct or in severe decline due to climate change.
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