Category Archives: GENERAL INTEREST

The LEAP Native Plants of the Year

Submitted by Cathi Lehn on behalf of the LEAP Native Plant Promotion Committee

The Lake Erie Allegheny Partnership for Biodiversity (LEAP; www.leapbio.org) is a consortium of forty-five (45) conservation-related organizations located in the Glaciated Allegheny Plateau ecoregion.  This ecoregion is defined by a common glacial history and climate and includes northeastern Ohio, western Pennsylvania and western New York.  LEAP member organizations are dedicated to the identification, protection and restoration of biodiversity in the region and to the increased public awareness of biodiversity.  Current LEAP members represent park districts, conservation organizations, universities, and governmental agencies in Northeast Ohio and western Pennsylvania.  

The LEAP Native Plant Promotion Committee (NPPC) was formed in 2008 in response to the threat of invasive plants to our natural areas.  The mission of the NPPC is to educate the public about the many benefits of native plants in the LEAP region and to join the nursery and landscaping trade in promoting the purchasing, selling, propagating and planting of our area’s native plant species.  In 2011 the Committee initiated a Native Plants of the Year campaign providing the gardener with three choices each year through 2022 of recommended native plants which are easily found in local nurseries. 

Using native plants in public and private landscapes and gardens can help reduce the threat of invasive non-native species to the region’s biodiversity.  The LEAP Native Plants of the Year campaign highlights native species that can make exceptional additional to area landscapes and gardens.  Native plants in the garden offer the following benefits:

  • Attract native wildlife
  • Reduce soil erosion
  • Require less fertilizer and watering
  • Promote native regional biodiversity
  • Thrive under natural conditions
  • Connect people to nature

LEAP Native Plants of the Year 2016

Spicebush (Lindera benzoin)

Spicebush is a deer-resistant shrub with early-season nectar for butterflies and bright red berries for migratory birds.  The common name refers to the sweet, spicy fragrance of the stems, leaves and fruits when bruised.

Spicebush berries_Judy Semroc   

Spicebush_Judy SemrocPhotos courtesy of Judy Semroc

Swamp Candles or Yellow Loosestrife (Lysimachia terrestris)

This showy perennial blooms vivid yellow in mid-summer adding color to rain gardens and wet areas.  Its sturdy stems make it an excellent cutting flower.  Native pollinators, like this syrphid flower fly, are attracted to the flower’s nectar.

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syrphid flower fly_Cheryl Harner   

Photos courtesy of Bill Hendricks (top) and Cheryl Harner (below)

Little Bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)

A colorful native prairie grass with striking blue-green foliage and pink overtones.  In the fall, its foliage takes on a coppery hue. It works well in areas prone to deer damage. 

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Little Bluestem_Roger Gettig   

Photos courtesy of Bill Hendricks (top) and Roger Gettig (below)

To find more information about the LEAP Native Plants of the Year (2011-2015) please visit: http://leapbio.org/native-plants

Also found on this page is a Native Plant Nurseries map created by Cleveland Metroparks that provides information on nurseries that sell native plants to our region. 

Brief Biography

Cathi is the Sustainable Cleveland Coordinator for the City of Cleveland Mayor’s Office of Sustainability which is a member of LEAP.  Cathi serves as the Chair of the LEAP Native Plant Promotion Committee and the LEAP Wildlife Conflict Committee.  She has recently revived the Sustainable Heights Network and serves on the Composting Committee.  Her true passion is in addressing the threat of plastic pollution to our waterways and hosts the Great Lake Erie Boat Float each year at Edgewater Park.

 

Make Your Own Kale Chips!

 by Ann McCulloh

It’s easy, yummy, low-carb and there’s no foil-lined bag to throw away.

5Kale finished resize

Kale is prolific, cold-hardy and very ornamental.

1Kale plant resize

It’s so full of nutrients that it’s consistently included in lists of the Top Ten most nutritious foods.  Crispy kale chips are a revelation – a delicately crunchy treat that have replaced potato chips in my almost-paleo diet.

Crispy Kale Chips Recipe:

Take 1 bunch of curly kale greens. Wash and dry very thoroughly. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Tear kale leaves from the midrib,

2Kale midrib resize

rub gently all over with olive oil and then sprinkle lightly with kosher salt.

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It’s easy to overdo the salt, so just a touch-you can add more later. Adding fresh garlic to the oil, or a grind of fresh black pepper are fun and easy variations. Spread the pieces loosely on a foil-lined cookie sheet and toast for 10-12 minutes in the oven.  It’s best to use several cookie sheets to avoid crowding the chips. Leaves will get crisp and just browned at tips.

4Kale crisp resize

 You may need to remove the most-browned ones from the edges, and put the pan back in the over for another minute to crisp the ones in the middle of the pan.

I chop the leftover center ribs, and add them to my next stir fry or batch of sautéed greens. You can even freeze them if you aren’t using them right away.

Summer Herbs to Warm Winter’s Cold Heart

by Ann McCulloh

If there’s one thing I do that consistently lifts my spirits all winter long, it’s making tea with herbs I’ve grown myself.

There’s almost no end to the number of friendly, easy to grow tea herbs that can thrive in an Ohio garden. I can harvest a whole winter’s worth of heartwarming flavors, colors and aromas from a handful of personal favorites grown in a very small space. The following are perennials that are planted one time, and return year after year.

Anise hyssop (Agastache foeniculum) sweet, anise-scented

Lemon Balm (Melissa officinalis) calming, lemony

Peppermint (Mentha piperita) sweet, aromatic, tummy-soothing

Spearmint (Mentha spicata) similar to Peppermint, less intense

Nettles (Urtica dioica) grassy flavor, rich in iron, calcium, magnesium and potassium

Lavender (Lavandula, various types) aromatic, soothing – and pretty!

Annuals Calendula and Chamomile have been re-seeding in my garden for years, moving around at will. I just move the ones that come up in awkward spots.

Chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla) soothing, earthy sweetness

chamomile flower

Calendula (Calendula officinalis) colorful, mildly pungent, gently promotes healing

Calendula flower

I purchase the following as plants each year, because they’re frost-tender. If you have a greenhouse or very sunny window (I do not) they can winter over in a pot:

Stevia (Stevia rebaudiana) sweetens non-calorically – just a teaspoon per pot is plenty for me!

Holy Basil (Ocimum sanctum) earthy, clove-scented and warming

Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) fragrant, stimulating and soothing to sore throats (sometimes survives outdoors in zone 6, but it’s not a sure thing.)

As a gardener I appreciate these herbs for their seeming imperviousness to pests, drought and disease. Some of them, like nettles and chamomile, contain so many healthy minerals and nutrients that they support the growth of neighboring plants, and are great for adding to the compost pile, too. A lovely  book about growing, harvesting and using herbs from your garden is How to Move Like a Gardener, by Deb Soule of Avena Botanicals; Under the Willow Press, 2013. I purchased my copy on-line at fedcoseeds.com.) Illustrated with gorgeous photos and poetically yet practically written, it’s a book to warm you with thoughts of summer gardens while sipping a cup of homegrown tea.

Harvesting the way I do it is pretty simple: I cut whole leafy stems before the plant flowers, bunch them and hang in an airy, shade place until dry (usually 7-10 days). Then I gently strip the leaves over a sheet of newspaper, and slide them into a glass jar. Flowers are picked in the morning after the dew dries, as soon as possible after they open, and hung up or dried on an old window screen, for a week or until crisp. That’s it, no fancy equipment, no fossil fuels, fans blowers or kits. 

herbs drying2

I keep each herb in its own separate jar, to use singly (peppermint, lemon balm) or blend at will. Just a tablespoon of lavender, mint or holy basil added to a pot of regular black tea adds a new sensory dimension. Lemon balm, chamomile, nettle and spearmint make a relaxing, restorative bedtime blend. I’m headed to the kitchen for a cup of calendula, rosemary and nettle – reviving after a couple of hours spent behind a desk!

A Poet Walks through “Painting the Modern Garden: Monet-Matisse.” Cleveland Museum of Art. October 11, 2015-January 6, 2016.

David Adams

People respond so individually to works of art, and one can never be sure where the journey of understanding will begin or end. I am sure that avid gardeners will revel not only in the paintings in this exhibit, but also in the technical details and horticultural expertise shared among the painters. Others may focus on the idea of the garden as a place of solace, so close to our most primal mythologies. As I leave aside the myriad of other possible perspectives on what was, for me at least, a stunning exhibition, I will try to describe a bit of this one poet’s journey, hoping that it might add some small grace to the journeys of others 

My first time walking through these galleries of gardens I felt an overwhelming explosion of the senses as the feast of colors leapt from the canvas in such works as these (of course, these thumbnails hardly do justice!). One can almost breathe in the fragrances, feel the touch of wind, and hear the insects flitting back and forth, the hushed voices of humans carrying their watering cans.

 
Dennis Miller Bunker, Chrysanthemums, 1888
Dennis Miller Bunker, Chrysanthemums, 1888
Chrysanthemums, 1888. Dennis Miller Bunker (American, 1861–1890). Oil on canvas; 90 x 121 cm. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, P3w5.

Images in this article provided courtesy of the Cleveland Museum of Art Press/Media Kit.

But after the overwhelming response of the senses, other interactions emerge as a dialogue with those long distant moments of creation, at first between poet and painting, then through the painting to the painter. What can I really see here if I just look long enough? What were you thinking as the painting came to rest as what I see? As a poet I might paraphrase Karl Shapiro’s prescient question: What is the poetry of all of that? If the poet has any luck at all, the answers blossom everywhere.

Poets have a long history of ecphrasis, using one of the other arts, usually visual arts, as an inspiration for a poem. John Hollander captures this history well in The Gazer’s Spirit: Poems Speaking to Silent Works of Art. (1995). Of course, even his subtitle begs the question of whether any work of art is truly silent. For a walk through these gardens so strongly resembles the journey through a really wonderful poem that I can scarcely let go of the experience. I can recall two other CMA exhibitions that affected me so, both in 1991. The first was The Triumph of Japanese Style, with its evocative, large painted screens that even had poems as part of the art itself. This show led to a set of “Sun and Moon Landscape” haiku. The second was Reckoning with Winslow Homer, an excursion that unfolded as a complete surprise, one that shattered all my preconceptions about that artist and led directly to one of the longest, most complex and thoroughly rewarding poems I ever wrote. So a rendered garden is also a story on its way to being.

And what can live in such gardens as these? Whatever one wishes, or even dreads. As people become more prominent in the paintings, or as the world outside the garden casts a deeper shadow in them, the stories emerge with greater force.

“Each day brings its toad, each night its dragon.” This opening line from Randall Jarrell’s “Jerome” somehow surfaced during my second view of the exhibit. Jarrell’s poem has as its framework an ecphrasis based on a Durër engraving of St. Jerome and His Lion, but quickly recasts itself as a journey into the life of a psychoanalyst—his aloneness, his solitude, the weight of the night’s dreams, and the solace brought him by the dawn. The extensive worksheets for this poem were preserved by Mary Jarrell in Jerome: The Biography of a Poem (1971). These worksheets reveal how the conversation between poet and work of art emerges and changes the resulting poem as it grows to something like completion. I believe that this sort of conversation lies at the heart of ecphrasis, at the heart of making the poem. One must imagine that painters have the same sort of interaction with their subjects.

Sjalusi i hagen, 1929-30
Sjalusi i hagen, 1929-30
Jealousy in the Garden, 1929–30. Edvard Munch (Norwegian, 1863–1944). Oil on canvas; 100 x 120 cm. Munch Museum, Oslo, MM M 437/Woll M 1662. Photo: © Munch Museum. © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

The same change in what there is to see seems evident in Münter’s Woman in a Garden or Klee’s Death in a Garden.

17_Woman_in_Garden

Woman in Garden, 1912. Gabriele Münter (German, 1877–1962). Oil on board; 48.3 x 66 cm. Neue Galerie New York EL. 51. This work is part of the collection of Estée Lauder and was made available through the generosity of Estée Lauder. © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn.
Paul KleeGerman, born Switzerland, 1879–1940Death in the Garden (Legend), 1919Oil on cotton, on cardboard nailed to wood10 3/4 x 9 3/4 in. (27.3 x 24.8 cm)Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Randall Shapiro1996.393The Art Institute of Chicago
Paul Klee
German, born Switzerland, 1879–1940
Death in the Garden (Legend), 1919
Oil on cotton, on cardboard nailed to wood
10 3/4 x 9 3/4 in. (27.3 x 24.8 cm)
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Randall Shapiro
1996.393
The Art Institute of Chicago
Death in the Garden (Legend), 1919. Paul Klee (Swiss, 1879–1940). Oil on cotton, on cardboard nailed to wood; 27.3 x 24.8 cm. The Art Institute of Chicago, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Randall Shapiro 1996.393. © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

When works such as these spark responses of such deep wonder, the question is never if a poem will emerge, but rather when it will emerge, how many will do so, and in what fashion. I read somewhere that later artists among the Surrealists and Dadaists felt the works of the Impressionists too constructed, too linear, too distant from the unconscious. That view would seem very odd to a poet just done “talking” with them, pressing the conversation deeper and deeper into the boundless garden, into the making of a painting or a poem—all the shifting lines and changes, the epiphanies and surprises along the way in these works that are never really static, never truly silent, and never the last word.

Bibliography

Hollander, John. The Gazer’s Spirit: Poems Speaking to Silent Works of Art. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.

Jarrell, Mary. Jerome: The Biography of a Poem. New York: Grossman Publishers, 1971.

What’s So Great About Hoverflies?

by Tom Gibson

Imagine sitting down with an impassioned collector of buttons to discuss his triumphs. First, a large red button discovered in an attic in Toronto.  Then a rare pearl button found at a second-hand store in Cleveland, followed by a detailed description, which the collector imagines to be droll, of the store’s eccentric proprietor. 

How soon before you want to scream?

That was my reaction to The Fly Trap, written by Fredrik Sjöberg, who has devoted his life to collecting hoverflies (202 separate species, according to the book) on an island off the coast of the Swedish mainland. I bring this book to the attention of Gardenopolis Cleveland readers because you might well be tempted to read it.  It made this year’s New York Times list of the 100 Notable Books and has gathered high praise from a Swedish Nobel prize winner and various reviewers:  ”A rare masterpiece…Graceful, poetic, astonishing, and–yes!–absolutely thrilling.”

Not. (One is reminded of a real Scandinavian masterpiece, The Emperor’s New Clothes.) The author displays an astonishing lack of enthusiasm, given his subject matter, for either nature or for the lives and roles of hoverflies; his main thrill comes from discovering species that others haven’t. In a burst of candor, he even admits to the narrowness of his passion when he describes it as “buttonology,” the collecting of something special  just to him. Only other collectors of things–saw flies, dragonflies, but also porcelain and painting seem to resonate.  Otherwise, he’d rather be alone on his island.

Instead of reading this book, I would encourage Gardenopolis Cleveland readers  to savor the real pleasure of observing hoverflies in your own gardens. They hover (of course) over your flowers, wings beating at 120 times per second, before diving in to gather pollen and darting to a neighboring blossom. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_9KAyoGTXs.

They are also a great example of mimicry in nature; though harmless in their adult stage, these two-winged flies (Diptera) have evolved to scare off predators by resembling more dangerous four-winged wasps (Hymenoptera).

Their greatest value to the gardener, however, may be the insatiable appetite their highly predatory larvae have for aphids.  One larva can eat 50 aphids a day!

Hover Fly Larva Plain

Fortunately, many familiar plants attract them, including fennel, lavender, cosmos, and dill (larger list here: http://permaculturenews.org/2014/10/04/plants-attract-beneficial-insects/).  Here’s a hoverfly eating dill pollen:

hoverfly and dill

Goji Berries for What?

by Tom Gibson

Now that I’m getting bumper crops of goji berries, I’ve got to figure out how to eat them and all their reputed antioxidants.  Ingested by themselves, nobody I’ve met seems to like them much.  Neither do the birds, bugs, and deer.  The brilliant red-orange berries–presumably visible to most critters–kept emerging all fall and remained virtually untouched .

The goji berry’s mild bittersweet taste does make a nice, but understated contrast as an addition to an apple/orange salad.  But the sheer volume of my harvest this fall necessitates a search for more variety.

A web search has turned up a winner. My wife and I would give

the recipe below between a B+ and an A-. And the dressing

would work well on all kinds of salads:

Ingredients

Salad

1 heaped cup red cabbage, shredded

1 medium beetroot, grated

2 carrots, grated

Corn cut from 1 corn cob

1 spring onion, cut on the diagonal, white part only

To garnish: Chopped coriander (cilantro) and a sprinkle of goji berries

Goji Dressing

¾ cup goji berries

4 tablespoons apple cider vinegar

1 tablespoon ginger, peeled and chopped

1½ tablespoons white miso

1 tablespoon tahini

Pinch of salt

Grind or two of black pepper

Instructions

Salad

Put the cabbage, beetroot, carrots and corn in a bowl and sprinkle over the onion, gently mix, and garnish with coriander and goji. Set aside while you prepare the dressing

Goji Dressing

Place goji berries into a glass or mug, and cover them, only just, with filtered water. Let them to soak for up to half an hour till nice and soft, keep the water – don’t throw it out

Blend all ingredients with the goji and their soak water till you’ve reached a nice consistency, then pour liberally over the rainbow salad and serve.

One Caveat: The recipe above is clearly meant for dried goji berries, not fresh.

Here’s what my fresh ones looked like:

gojiberrysalad IMG_2374

At 3/4 of a cup, this quantity of goji berries is at least equal to--and maybe more than--the tiny Whole Foods packets of dried berries which sell for $17 apiece.

The end result is as tasty as it is colorful:

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Perennials that won’t tolerate leaf mulches by Thomas Christopher of Garden Rant

GARDENOPOLIS Cleveland thanks Thomas Christopher and Garden Rant for this interesting and relevant article.

Perennials that won’t tolerate leaf mulches by Thomas Christopher

In a recent post, Evelyn Hadden shared some very useful tips on how fall’s leaves can be used in the garden.   As a perennial enthusiast, I’d like to add a couple of caveats – a mulch of autumn leaves can be fatal to certain kinds of perennials.

A mulch of freshly fallen leaves applied an inch or two thick, or even just a heavy leaf fall from nearby trees, tends to keep the ground beneath it damp, especially if the leaves are large and you don’t shred them before applying them (I always recommend shredding leaves with a dedicated leaf shredder or a lawn mower when using them as mulch).

Because they keep the ground damp, leaf mulches of any kind, shredded or otherwise, are not beneficial for silvery, woolly-leaved plants such as lamb’s ears (Stachys byzantina) or lavenders (Lavandula spp.).  These plants are adapted to dry sites — their silver hue and hairy surface are adaptions to protect them against dehydration and drought – and they will rot if  kept consistently damp.

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Gray, hairy plants like this lamb’s ear won’t tolerate leaf mulches 

Other perennials that won’t tolerate prolonged dampness include many culinary herbs such as thyme, oregano, and sage, all of which are native to the dry, rocky soils found around the Mediterranean. In fact, Mediterranean plants as a whole generally do not flourish when swaddled with leaves.

Succulents likewise will rot if kept damp; keep leaf mulches away from your sedums.  Alpine plants are also vulnerable to damp, especially in wintertime – do not use leaf mulches in the rock garden (a gravel mulch is far better there).

Finally, as Dale Hendricks emphasized in a recent email, leaf mulches are also problematic for herbaceous evergreens such as heucheras and hellebores.  If the mulch is applied simply by raking or blowing leaves onto the garden bed, then it is likely to bury the perennials’ foliage and interfere with their wintertime photosynthesis (a heavy leaf fall from nearby trees can achieve the same thing if left undisturbed).  When used around evergreens, I recommend shredding the leaves thoroughly and then tucking the mulch in by hand so as not to bury the foliage.

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Care must be used in mulching evergreens like these coral bells

Photos by Susan Harris.

Perennials that won’t tolerate leaf mulches originally appeared on Garden Rant on November 28, 2015.

GARDENOPOLIS Cleveland Plans Pollinator Pocket Project!!!

News from the trenches: GARDENOPOLIS Cleveland proposes planting Pollinator Pockets around the city!

Gardenopolis_PollinatorPocket_final_o

The need to establish habitats for pollinating insects has been much in the news lately. Many homeowners have been inspired to do their part and we are inspired to help them to do so. Our grand goal is to facilitate the planting of a series of carefully curated 5’x5’ pollinator pockets throughout the Cleveland urban area. According to a number of sources these small plots are enough habitat to nurture and sustain a variety of pollinators, including bees, butterflies, moths and other needed insects.

butterfly on coneflower 2

We think this is a great idea—a manageable  and incremental way for each of us to do our part. And, just think how beautiful it would be if each block had a series of such plantings!

Right now we are preparing the soil of 7 sample plots around Shaker and Cleveland Heights using the lasagna mulching technique (layers of newspaper, straw, leaves, manure, compost and wood chips.)

jane lasagna mulch

In the spring we will install  pollinator plants for all-season bloom and deer-resistance. We will provide participating homeowners with an instruction manual for the maintenance of the chosen plants. You will be able to identify our Pollinator Pockets by the yard signs posted near the pollinator pockets. Sound appealing? Next year you may yearn for one of your own. We will keep you posted as to pollinator plot progress and how you may sign-up.

Watch for our sign: 

Gardenopolis_PollinatorPocket_final_o

Nature at Night

by Tom Gibson

Like my colleague, I respond to the beauty of Manet’s and Monet’s gardens, but perhaps a little less enthusiastically. I like my Nature more “tooth and claw.”  I was fascinated this summer, for example, when I saw a wasp stumbling across the ground of my garden carrying paralyzed prey on its back and looking for its burial hole (and egg-laying site). Something like this…

Digger Wasp

So it should come as no surprise that my favorite artistic renditions of nature lean more to Bartok.  He was enthralled by the sounds of “Nature at Night” and kept returning to that theme again and again.

Here’s a typical movement from a Bartok piano piece entitled “Out of Doors.”  Go to minute 6:38:

 

Here’s an even more ominous version of Nature at Night , the Bartok #5 string quartet played by the Takacs Quartet.  Go to minute 9:13:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upoFCdhqgX4

CMA Garden Exhibit Review: Did He Really Paint in the Garden in His Summer Whites?

by Elsa Johnson

10_Louis_Comfort_Tiffany

Wednesday I went back to the garden exhibit at the Cleveland Museum of Art for the third time. I like just wandering through, letting my eyes pull me to what attracts them….and every time it is when I come to the ‘international’ second half of the show, that the picture of Louis Comfort Tiffany by Joaquin Sorolla, reaches out, grabs me, and stops me in my tracks. There Louis Comfort Tiffany sits, handsome,  posed in front of his easel, brush in hand, reaching out in the act of touching paint to canvas, in his summer whites, surrounded by symphonies of flowers, a glimpse of the Long Island shore and a bit of blue sea or sound over his right shoulder. 

Wait. Back up. Did I say summer whites? I did.

These are not just any summer whites (did he really paint in his summer whites?) … no – these are dazzling summer whites, vibrating summer whites, summer whites made up of deft touches of many colors — never too much; always just enough – an intricate game of using dabs of color in folds and shadows to make what is hit by sunlight highlighted, heightened, and even brighter, making this sun drenched 1911 portrait of Tiffany so much more than just a portrait. Despite all the flowers surrounding him and Tiffany’s own pleasant face, it is the subtle unsubtle suit that keeps drawing one’s eyes back. 

Both Sorolla and Tiffany were immensely talented and hard-working and both achieved great success. One feels – or imagines – that between the artist Sorolla and his subject, Tiffany,  also an artist, that there is an ongoing conversation comprised of an intimacy of understanding the job, and shared humor at the joke (surely they didn’t paint in their summer whites). As we look at the painting, we are standing where Sorolla stood. That vibratingly white, light obsessed suit is the medium of discourse.

There are two other paintings by Sorolla on either side of the Louis Comfort Tiffany picture. Both, pictures of Sorolla’s home in Spain, are also light-filled, but it is a softer light, more diffused, luminous and shimmery, and the handling of the paint and thus the effect so different from Monet’s more visceral application — and this exhibit is really, when all is said and done, about Monet. But, still, it can be very nice to stray from the main course.

Should you find yourself as the result of the exhibit — or this small tidbit — interested in the Spanish artist Joaquin Sorolla, you can go to www.joaquin-sorolla-y-bastida where you will find a biography and a file of more than 300 images of this very prolific artist’s work. (I mean, really – would you paint in your summer whites?)