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Inspired by a writer's long-gone home, an artist made gardens in its remains

Inspired by a writer's long-gone home, an artist made gardens in its remains

Boston Globea day ago
'On day two of the residency I'm calling the director, saying, 'I have an idea. What if we put the house back as a garden?'' Glovinski said. 'To make this a place again a sanctuary for artists, for creatives, for the residents.'
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Never before much of a green thumb, the artist made an art project of
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A giant flower mural, Almanac, by Carly Glovinski, is on view at Mass MoCA.
Artist: Carly Glovinski ; Photographer: Julia Featheringill
In July, Glovinski installed '
'Opelske' is Glovinski's first piece blending art with live greenery. 'The two are so intertwined to me at this point,' she said. 'The artist and the gardener.'
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A piece made of glass tile and live greenery, Opelske, by Carly Glovinski is at Seaport West in Boston.
Artist: Carly Glovinski ; Photographer: Julia Featheringill
Where to find her:
www.carlyglovinski.com
Age
: 44
Originally from
: Berwick, Maine
Lives in
: South Berwick, Maine.
Making a living
: She works full-time as a tech marketer.
Studio
: Glovinski has a studio in a South Berwick mill building, maintained 'in a chaotic mess that only I understand,' she said.
Carly Glovinski tends to her garden, a living art exhibit she has created where the Wild Knoll house, formerly owned by writer May Sarton, used to stand in York, Maine.
Heather Diehl/For The Boston Globe
How she started
: 'I didn't come from a family of artists. My dad was a union telephone company guy, and my mom was a social worker,' Glovinski said. 'But they built their world. They built their house. I come from that background of resourcefulness and making and craft.'
What she makes
: For Wild Knoll, 'I didn't want to use any chemicals. I didn't want a fence,' she said. 'I had to find plants that were drought resistant, deer resistant. bulletproof.' Among the dozens of blooms: Butterfly weed,Heliopsis, and a Mango Tango Hyssop frothier than cotton candy.
And always, there's the artist's eye. Sarton's floor plan now boasts a different color theme in each room. 'It's such a painterly process,' Glovinski said. 'All these different ways of making marks. All of these different ways of putting down color. All the textures.'
Carly Glovinski's Wild Knoll living art exhibit stands where the Wild Knoll house, formerly owned by writer May Sarton, once stood. Each former room of the house is now a different garden bed filled with different colored flowers.
Heather Diehl/For The Boston Globe
What May Sarton would think:
'On any given day she could probably find some fault with the flowers themselves,' the artist said. 'But overall, the idea of making a house of flowers, I think she would love.'
Advice for artists
: 'Just keep falling forward. There's a point where if you keep doing, you can trust the doing. If you keep making, you can trust the making. It will start to lead you.'
Wild Knoll is open by appointment. For more information, email
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The Wild Knoll living art exhibit stands where the Wild Knoll house, formerly owned by writer May Sarton, once was. Artist Carly Glovinski planted purple flowers in an area that used to be a three-season porch.
Heather Diehl/For The Boston Globe
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Inspired by a writer's long-gone home, an artist made gardens in its remains
Inspired by a writer's long-gone home, an artist made gardens in its remains

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Inspired by a writer's long-gone home, an artist made gardens in its remains

'On day two of the residency I'm calling the director, saying, 'I have an idea. What if we put the house back as a garden?'' Glovinski said. 'To make this a place again a sanctuary for artists, for creatives, for the residents.' Advertisement Never before much of a green thumb, the artist made an art project of Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up A giant flower mural, Almanac, by Carly Glovinski, is on view at Mass MoCA. Artist: Carly Glovinski ; Photographer: Julia Featheringill In July, Glovinski installed ' 'Opelske' is Glovinski's first piece blending art with live greenery. 'The two are so intertwined to me at this point,' she said. 'The artist and the gardener.' Advertisement A piece made of glass tile and live greenery, Opelske, by Carly Glovinski is at Seaport West in Boston. Artist: Carly Glovinski ; Photographer: Julia Featheringill Where to find her: Age : 44 Originally from : Berwick, Maine Lives in : South Berwick, Maine. Making a living : She works full-time as a tech marketer. Studio : Glovinski has a studio in a South Berwick mill building, maintained 'in a chaotic mess that only I understand,' she said. Carly Glovinski tends to her garden, a living art exhibit she has created where the Wild Knoll house, formerly owned by writer May Sarton, used to stand in York, Maine. Heather Diehl/For The Boston Globe How she started : 'I didn't come from a family of artists. My dad was a union telephone company guy, and my mom was a social worker,' Glovinski said. 'But they built their world. They built their house. I come from that background of resourcefulness and making and craft.' What she makes : For Wild Knoll, 'I didn't want to use any chemicals. I didn't want a fence,' she said. 'I had to find plants that were drought resistant, deer resistant. bulletproof.' Among the dozens of blooms: Butterfly weed,Heliopsis, and a Mango Tango Hyssop frothier than cotton candy. And always, there's the artist's eye. Sarton's floor plan now boasts a different color theme in each room. 'It's such a painterly process,' Glovinski said. 'All these different ways of making marks. All of these different ways of putting down color. All the textures.' Carly Glovinski's Wild Knoll living art exhibit stands where the Wild Knoll house, formerly owned by writer May Sarton, once stood. Each former room of the house is now a different garden bed filled with different colored flowers. Heather Diehl/For The Boston Globe What May Sarton would think: 'On any given day she could probably find some fault with the flowers themselves,' the artist said. 'But overall, the idea of making a house of flowers, I think she would love.' Advice for artists : 'Just keep falling forward. There's a point where if you keep doing, you can trust the doing. If you keep making, you can trust the making. It will start to lead you.' Wild Knoll is open by appointment. For more information, email Advertisement The Wild Knoll living art exhibit stands where the Wild Knoll house, formerly owned by writer May Sarton, once was. Artist Carly Glovinski planted purple flowers in an area that used to be a three-season porch. Heather Diehl/For The Boston Globe

Here's another way to remember your loved ones, by preserving their tattoos after death
Here's another way to remember your loved ones, by preserving their tattoos after death

Boston Globe

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Here's another way to remember your loved ones, by preserving their tattoos after death

'He got that one long before we met,' mused Angelica, speaking via telephone the other day from her hometown of Wheeling, 'I'm guessing he got it in the late '80s, maybe early '90s. It was on his right triceps, part of an arm sleeve, his only sports tattoo … and he loved it.' Advertisement Just as Radevski's memory lives on with Angelica, 35, and Preston, their 10-year-old son, so does his Steelers tattoo. Soon after TJ's death, Angelica had it preserved and framed by Kyle Sherwood, an Ohio-based mortician and third-generation funeral home director who nearly 10 years ago founded Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'Right now, I've got TJ in the dining room,' said Angelica, referring to her late husband's framed tattoo, which is approximately 25 square inches. 'He's sitting in my grandmother's chair. But we'll move him around, dining room, living room, mantel. It's feels good to hold him.' For the labor-and-delivery nurse turned college professor, TJ's framed artwork resonates far more, and deeper, than the small, nondescript box of ashes she received after his cremation. That has been just one of the myriad surprises she has experienced in her grief-and-recovery journey. Advertisement 'I thought the ashes were going to fill something that had been missing,' she said. 'You know, he'd be home, and it'll feel complete. Then I had [his ashes] on the mantel, next to one of our pictures, and for me it was like, 'How did my 250-pound, muscular, loud, tattooed husband accumulate to a box?' ' Characterizing that revelation as 'the worst feeling in the world and everything that I didn't even think of,' she said her mind-set changed immediately once Sherwood delivered TJ's preserved Steelers tattoo. 'The tattoo was, 'Wow! This is my husband,' ' Angelica recalled. 'I know the crinkles [in the preserved skin] are from his muscles — the tattoo is him. There were so many components to it that, he's there . I feel him there, spiritually and energetically, I really do. But this was the physical, selfish component that we all want — for them always to be with us.' According to Sherwood, Save My Ink Forever has preserved 'thousands' of tattoos, ranging in size from an inked wedding band to a full-body display, with prices ranging from slightly less than $2,000 to, in the case of the full-body tattoo of a Saskatchewan man, a little more than $100,000. Yet for the growing prevalence of tattooed athletes — especially among NBA, NFL, and MLB players — Sherwood said Radevski's tattoo was the first sports-specific ink he has been asked to preserve. 'Honestly, that's surprised me,' said Sherwood, whose funeral home and tattoo preservation business is in Sagamore Hills, roughly halfway between Cleveland and Akron. 'Because, if you watch sports nowadays, you see tattooed players all the time, right? They're everywhere.' 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She knew of Save My Ink Forever, recalling that she first learned about preserving skin some 25 years ago when watching a 'Ripley's Believe It Or Not' episode on TV. 'We talked at length about it,' she recalled. 'And TJ was fine with it. He said, 'Look, Babe, whatever you want … just don't stuff me and stand me up in the living room corner.' It was son Preston, a diehard Eagles fan, who insisted that his dad's Steelers tattoo be saved. 'That was another neat part of this,' said Angelica. 'He loved his dad, even though they feuded over Steelers and Eagles all the time. So when Preston heard, it was, 'Yay, we're saving T's Steelers tattoo!' ' A tattoo from Steelers fans TJ Radevski, which was preserved by Save My Ink Forever, an Ohio-based company. Keith Delarosa The TikTok live episodes often have been emotional and sometimes exhausting for Angelica. People have been eager to talk about the tattoo preservation process, sports, and topics related to losing one's life partner. She tells them to grieve in their own way, at their own pace, and go with what makes them feel best. She and Preston wore Steelers jerseys to TJ's services. She knows some felt that was odd, perhaps disrespectful, but she was convinced it was right … for her, for Preston, and for TJ. Angelica was delighted, during one TikTok live, when one husband and wife said they would preserve a large portrait of three Steelers players that he has tattooed on his back. 'They showed it to me, it's in black and gray,' said Angelica, 'and it's beautiful.' Advertisement Someone not into sports might not fully understand what saving such a piece might mean. 'That's the thing about sports,' she said. 'It's not about a win or a touchdown. It brings people together and you support each other through win and loss, right? Friends become family, those bonds, that's what it is.' 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