Ebony G. Patterson’s deceptively beautiful work–colorful tapestries and garden-inspired installations created out of faux flowers, glitter, sequins, fabric, toys, beads, jewelry, and other embellishments–comes to life at The New York Botanical Garden, where she employs the beauty and symbolism of living plants to unearth the complex entanglements of race, gender and colonialism.
Accompanying a major site-specific exhibition of sculptural and horticultural installations at The New York Botanical Garden, this volume provides deeper insights into the artist’s multilayered practice. Patterson’s work has long examined and experimented with the concept of the garden through a practice that uses beauty as an invitation to confront larger societal questions and concerns.