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In Living COLOR
Veranda
|September - October 2025
Peering into the past, The National Gallery of Art cultivates garden-grown pigments found in its most valuable collections.
WITHIN THE hallowed halls of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, hang priceless masterpieces—works by Vermeer, da Vinci, Morisot, Monet, Rembrandt. Yet one of the museum's most treasured collections lies not inside its neoclassical walls, but beyond them. Out of the public eye, tucked between the building's exterior and what the museum's architect John Russell Pope conceived of as “moat walls,” is something just as enticing: plants nurtured, hand-watered, and meticulously cultivated by a dedicated team. Among them are showy varieties of ficus, aglao-nema, and bromeliads for rotunda displays; the museum’s prized azaleas; and—increasingly valuable—a collection of small plants that could easily be mistaken for weeds.
For the last four years, Solomon Foster, the National Gallery's senior horticulturist and manager of the museum's 11 greenhouses, has tended to these plants not for their beauty, but rather for their color-giving properties. The effort to grow Rubia tinctoria (madder root), Rhamnus cathartica (buckthorn), Reseda luteola (weld), Isatis tinctoria (woad), and Denne historien er fra September - October 2025-utgaven av Veranda.
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FLERE HISTORIER FRA Veranda
Veranda
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Designer Nathan Turner preserves the magic of his family's European holiday traditions within the rustic refinement of his California home.
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