The Flora of Bensonhurst
The Flora of Bensonhurst
About the project
Elevated stations of Bensonhurst provide a dramatic opportunity for glass artwork at the platform level. Joan Linder created drawings of flora based upon wild vegetation seen from the streets and lots within a six-block radius of the 71 St station. The result is an elegant, dynamic and specific tribute to the landscape of Bensonhurst, which endures, among other things, as an echo of Brooklyn’s past. These panels act as windows to a lost history — a place shaped by Native Americans and farmers. The botanical images offer passengers an experience that is a counterpoint to the built environment of the city.
"The Flora of Bensonhurst" is composed of six intricate drawings of plants flowing in the direction of train. Three on each platform, the plants rendered in cool colors (blue, green, and purple) on the Manhattan-bound platform alert the riders as they venture out in the morning. Those in warm colors (red, turquoise, and orange) are placed on the Brooklyn-bound platform to greet commuters as they make their way home from work.
For the project, Linder painstakingly created large-scale drawings in pen and ink on paper, which then be scaled and translated into laminated glass. The plants against a milky white background resemble a lightbox, which are constantly shifting under the daylight and also viewable at night from the street level.
About the artist
Joan Linder is a Buffalo, New York-based artist known for making drawings packed with thousands of tiny, energized marks to create life size representation of figures and objects. Her artwork has been exhibited in numerous solo and group shows including at the Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, the Bronx Museum, the Queens Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. She has been awarded residency fellowships at Yaddo, MacDowell Colony, Villa Montalvo, Smack Mellon Studios, Lower East Side Printshop, and a Pollock Krasner Foundation grant.