Gelsey Bell and Joseph White: Meander - Brooklyn Botanic Garden

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Gelsey Bell and Joseph White: Meander

Gelsey Bell and Joseph White: Meander

Tours | Art in the Garden | Audio Walk

Starts at the Visitor Center
Listen on Your Personal Device

Meander is a site-specific sound walk created for Brooklyn Botanic Garden that guides listeners on a meditative stroll into the natural landscape.

Best experienced using headphones. To avoid interruptions, consider switching your phone to “do not disturb” mode.

Running time 23:17

Created by Joseph White and HERE Arts Residency Program artist Gelsey Bell, the composers who brought you Cairns (included on the New York Times “Best Theater of 2020” list), Meander encourages listeners to watch, listen, and reset their clocks to pastoral temporality, inviting them to sink into the complex patterns and fine details of the natural environment. Listen and explore at the Garden or see the virtual audio walk below while you listen from home. Meander is copresented with HERE.



A Virtual Audio Walk

Listen to Meander at home and enjoy winter scenes from the Garden. Photography by Michael Stewart.

This garden has a boundless variety of smells and eye candy for you to experience. ... Think of this short walk as just a first act.

When you get to an area with a large lawn on your left and the opening to the Overlook path on your right, stop and behold the view of what is called the Cherry Esplanade.

Take a moment to slip under the cherry trees....

I love the signature horizontal lines on the trunks of cherry trees. Check out their wealth of color and texture in the shades of brown and gray and green—every trunk as intricate and exquisite as any impressionist painting on the wall of a museum.

Straight ahead we should see this remarkably scraggly tree that looks like it’s out of a fairy-tale.

On the other side of this bridge is a little clearing with a smattering of boulders. Most likely these big rocks are what geologists call erratics, large stones carried on the back of a glacier at the end of the last ice age.

A blue jay swoops overhead.... I start noticing the infinitely smaller movements of leaves and grasses vibrating rather than going from point A to point B.

As we’re curving with the flow of water moving downstream, you should be able to start seeing the pebbles and rocks that line the creek—pebbles moved by the water just like these big erratic boulders were moved by the melting glacier....

In an earlier part of Earth’s history, rivers and streams did not yet meander. They simply flowed in a straight line, because plants with roots had not yet evolved. This meandering is a product of life’s entwinement with water. To meander is to react to what and who is around you.

The road crosses the creek here, but it barely registers as a bridge.

On the other side, take a left and you’ll find yourself in another green lawn with scattered trees. The creek continues on your left and opens up to a large pond ahead of you.

Let’s find a little patch of ground.... Let’s notice the way our breath moves in and out and the shifting kaleidoscope of lines, textures, and colors in our field of vision.... If you want, while you keep walking very slowly, bring your head up and see the detail of what’s around you and above you.

I’ve made my way to the edge of the big pond.... I’m taking in what is around me in more complex detail than I was before. I no longer see just a tree or the surface of the water. Everything is alive with a symphony of crisp and infinite complexity.

But this is just a warm-up to the real event. The one where you trace your own line and meander following your own compass. So, where shall we turn our attention to now?

Support

Meander is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature.

Logo for New York State Council on the Arts


Image, top of page: Michael Stewart