The Introductory House tour will be unavailable from November 12-22 as we prepare for Yuletide at Winterthur. Take one of our speciality house tours and enjoy seldom seen rooms in the mansion! Explore Tours »
The Needle’s I: Stitching Identity examines how we work with needles and thread to create a sense of self. From historic samplers and clothing to contemporary pieces, the exhibition presents stitchers and stitchery from the 18th century to the present day and explores these makers, their marks, and their stories through themes of family, memory, and craft tradition. The exhibit is inspired by The Needle’s Eye: Women and Work in the Age of Revolution, Marla Miller’s important examination of 18th and early 19th-century identity, gender, and craft and moves it to the present day.
On October 6 and 7, The Needle’s I: Stitching Identity, A Winterthur Conference will explore the themes of the exhibition, further examining how we work with needles and thread to create a sense of self. Join visiting scholars, designers, artists, and Winterthur curators, conservators, and other staff for this two-day conference. Register now.
Jacqueline Kennedy’s 1962 televised look inside the White House influenced a generation. It took some help from Winterthur.
When First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy gave television viewers their first look at the newly restored interior of the White House, she broke ground in many ways—and she made a lasting impression.
“A Tour of the White House with Mrs. John F. Kennedy” is considered by some television scholars to be the first prime time documentary targeted to a female audience. Broadcast on the CBS and NBC networks on February 14, 1962, it was the most-watched television program of its day. By the time it was shown on ABC four days later, it had drawn 80 million viewers.
“My mother was still talking about it thirty years later, when I was contemplating a thesis topic and realized the connection between Winterthur and the White House project,” says Elaine Rice Bachmann, a former student in the Winterthur Program in American Material Culture and curator of the upcoming exhibition Jacqueline Kennedy and H. F. du Pont: From Winterthur to the White House. “Because the medium of television was well established by 1962, with one in nearly every home, and in a time before multiple channels were available, it meant that nearly every American watched this program.” Due to syndication, people in 50 countries eventually were able to view the tour.
Winterthur founder Henry Francis du Pont played a key role in the First Lady’s famous restoration of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Kennedy, determined to turn the faded home into a place of beauty and historic value that was worthy of a head of state, undertook the project soon after her husband, John F. Kennedy, was inaugurated in January 1961. She personally invited du Pont, then considered the nation’s greatest collector of, and foremost authority on, American historical decoration, to chair her Fine Arts Committee. The committee—suggested by Winterthur Director Charles F. Montgomery—searched for and acquired the art and antiques needed to realize Kennedy’s vision. Du Pont gave scholarly credibility to the effort.
Seeing a need for a permanent steward of the White House collection, Kennedy named Lorraine Waxman Pearce, a graduate of the Winterthur Program in Early American Culture who worked as a registrar at Winterthur, the first curator of the White House in March 1961. By September of that year, Congress enacted legislation designating the White House a museum, and in November, the White House Historical Association was chartered.
“Everything in the White House must have a reason for being there,” Kennedy told Life magazine at the time. “It would be sacrilege merely to redecorate it—a word I hate. It must be restored, and that has nothing to do with decoration. That is a question of scholarship.”
Within the year, cameras captured the big reveal.
“I think what is important to acknowledge is that this was not just ‘celebrity’ watching, although the enormous popularity of Mrs. Kennedy cannot be underestimated,” Bachmann says. “It was considered an important educational event, watched by many children. The media widely applauded the First Lady for her efforts to share White House history and American history with the public.”
Kennedy’s televised tour was not scripted, Bachmann points out. The First Lady wrote her own notes, which she studied in advance of the taping. She specified the route through the White House—through the State Dining Room, and then through the iconic Red, Blue, and Green rooms—and decided what furnishings and art to discuss. “The producers documented that they never needed to reshoot any scenes with her,” Bachmann says. “She was a one-take wonder.” The performance earned Kennedy an honorary Emmy.
Three pages of Mrs. Kennedy’s handwritten notes for the program, generously loaned by the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, will be on display in the Winterthur exhibition, as will correspondence between Kennedy and du Pont from the Winterthur collection.
The story of Kennedy and du Pont’s relationship and his influence on the restoration will also be told through beautiful objects, photos, and other documents. Jacqueline Kennedy and H.F. du Pont: From Winterthur to the White House opens May 7, 2022.
Until then, you can celebrate the 60th anniversary of the broadcast—and Valentine’s Day—by watching portions of “A Tour of the White House with Mrs. John F. Kennedy”via CBS’s Youtube.com channel.
Our weeks-long bloom of snowdrops lightens the winter blues. See them while they last.
Henry Francis du Pont’s garden diaries for the winters of the 1920s and ’30s make many mentions of warm-weather golf and Galanthus, a flower known by the common name of snowdrop. By the 1940s, du Pont wrote that he enjoyed the blossoming of late winter so much, he no longer wished to spend the entire season at his home in Boca Grande, Florida. He wanted to return to Winterthur.
A symbol of spring and hope in Western art and literature, the snowdrop has since become one of the estate’s signature flowers, blooming reliably in vast carpets of white on the March Bank and in other garden areas starting as early as January, thanks to du Pont’s early experiments. You can start looking for them in all their glorious profusion now.
Galanthus describes a genus of about 20 species of small perennial bulbs that grow as two linear leaves bearing a single white, bell-shaped flower with delicate green markings. The blossom hangs like a drop. Native to Europe and western Asia, they naturalize easily, especially in deciduous woodlands, where du Pont planted them to extend the season of bloom across Winterthur’s 60 acres of natural garden. His earliest recorded sighting in a season was on December 7, 1931.
Du Pont planted seven different species and seven cultivars beginning in the early 1900s. Winterthur still has seven species—though a couple have replaced du Pont’s originals—and more than fifty cultivars. Winterthur’s garden team, always developing new ways to preserve du Pont’s singular vision, continues his experiments.
“We are trialing ones that flower earlier and later, ones with different flower forms such as doubles, and some with variations in green and yellow markings, all to extend the level of interest or the season,” says Linda Eirhart, director of horticulture and senior curator of plants. “They are primarily white with green markings, but there are subtle differences between the species and cultivars. It’s fun to look at them with that level of detail.”
Though individual plants keep their flowers for only a few weeks, the sequence of bloom times for the different species ensures touches or drifts of white across the estate from fall into spring.
Snowdrops are wonderful plants for home gardeners who are looking to create visual interest and color in winter, Eirhart says. Snowdrops layer well with hostas and ferns, grow in a variety of conditions, and require little maintenance. Large mail order companies offer a few species and cultivars. Look to specialty nurseries for more unusual ones.
Winterthur boasts one of the largest displays of snowdrops in the United States. Plan your visit around the weather. Mild weather brings the blooms sooner and stronger. The blossoms tighten up during especially frigid days, such as those in mid-January, but will open again on warmer days. You’ll find them into March.
Winterthur connects the past and the present in an exciting new exhibition showcasing contemporary art. Transformations features more than thirty nationally recognized artists whose work draws inspiration from the historic collections of the museum, garden, and library. Discover how the old influences the new—forging connections across communities, transforming our perspectives about history, and commenting on our lives today. These artistic expressions reflect each artist’s connection to the fine craftsmanship and design in Winterthur’s collection of decorative arts and archival materials as well as its naturalistic garden and landscape.
Transformations is an ongoing project that began in the spring of 2021. Explore the online exhibition now to see current and past works. Then visit the Galleries beginning in June to experience more, in person. Don’t miss this one-of-a-kind collaboration!
About Winterthur’s Maker–Creator Research Fellowship
Most of the artists in Transformations took part in the Maker–Creator Research Fellowship program, which invites artists, writers, filmmakers, horticulturists, craftspeople, and other creative professionals to immerse themselves in Winterthur’s collections. The fellowship provides a stipend and gives access to the museum and estate for research. Works resulting from the fellowships are on view in the galleries and garden. For more information and to apply, visit our Fellowships page.
Artists
Transformations is an ongoing project that began in spring 2021. Explore the Transformations online exhibition for more information on current and past works. This list of participating artists will be updated as new maker-creators are included in the exhibition.
On View
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Damon Smith
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Damon G. Smith works in Aberdeen, Maryland, and is an accomplished quilter…
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Kate Sekules
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Kate Sekules is a mending advocate, activist, educator, and researcher. She is…
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Bandbox Collective
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Bandboxes were used, primarily by women, to store and transport hats, clothing,…
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Gregg Moore and Omar Tate
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Our project, ˈȯi-stər, builds on our previous collaborations to connect people in…
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Jerome Bias
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Jerome Bias is a furniture maker and cultural heritage practitioner, specializing in…
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Lauren Frances Adams
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Lauren Frances Adams is a painter and installation artist whose work has…
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Kirin Joya Makker
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Kirin Joya Makker is professor of American Studies at Hobart William Smith…
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Joey Quiñones
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Joey Quiñones is a sculptor working primarily with fiber and ceramics. They…
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The Chairmaker’s Toolbox
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Winterthur’s collection of furniture and tools from noted shops like that of…
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Ellie Richards
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Ellie Richards is a furniture designer and sculptor interested in the role…
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Kathryn Sullivan
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Kathryn is a woodworker focused on restoration and conservation. Informed as a…
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Kelly Harris
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Kelly Harris is a woodworker, furniture maker, designer, and educator. She designs…
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Aspen Golann
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Aspen Golann is a furniture maker, artist and educator whose work explores…
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Rebecca Gilbert
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Rebecca Gilbert is a Philadelphia-based artist whose work exemplifies a dedication to…
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Jennifer Steverson
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Mojo for Climate Change is inspired by the design of antique seed…
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Alka Raman
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Alka Raman is a historian with a Ph.D. from the Department of…
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Elaine K. Ng
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Elaine K. Ng is an artist who utilizes material investigation and process-based…
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Margaret O’Neil
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Curtains, slipcovers, and other soft furnishings at Winterthur were often made from…
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Alexandra Cade and Tommy Dougherty
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While seeking inspiration for their own Winterthur composition, Allie Cade and Tommy…
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The Radish Project
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Working with radish and root-vegetable plants, artist Dan Feinberg, soil scientist Dr.…
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Richard Saja
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Richard Saja is an artist making work in Catskill, New York. After…
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Samara Weaver
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Samara grew up making artwork her whole life. Having an artist for…
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Heather Ossandon
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Heather Ossandon creates ceramics that reflect her distinct background. Throughout her career,…
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Sharon Williams
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Sharon and Jemica Williams are part of a community of quilters from…
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Andrew Raftery
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Andrew Raftery is an artist specializing in fictional and autobiographical narratives of…
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Stefania Urist
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Stefania Urist wants people to think about the importance of trees. A…
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Michael Kalmbach and Creative Vision Factory
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A new outdoor bench at Winterthur connects communities through history, memories, and…
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Elissa Edwards and Élan Ensemble
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Elissa Edwards combines historic music and sounds from nature to create a…
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Kim Hall and Justin Hardison, Nottene
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The Winterthur landscape inspires Nottene’s redesign of the galleries lounge. Kimberly Hall…
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Designed by Katya Roelse, who recreated Kennedy’s wedding dress on view in…
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Lenny Wilson
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Wilson learned to make shoes at a leather-trades college in London before…
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Deirdre Murphy
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Since childhood, Deirdre Murphy has been fascinated by nature, citing it as…
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Stefania Urist
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Stefania Urist wants people to think about the importance of trees. A…
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Rob Finn
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The art of Rob Finn is a bittersweet reminder that life is…
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Stefania Urist wants people to think about the importance of trees.
A resident of Vermont, Stefania Urist is keenly interested in trees and old-growth forests. She was exploring Winterthur in 2020 learning from staff conservators how to preserve outdoor sculptures, when she saw an Instagram post that changed her direction. In the post, there was a photo of a staff member counting the rings of a 300-year-old oak that had been felled by a tornado that summer. “The tree was a wide as the staff member was tall,” Urist. “I knew right away it was old. When I saw it, I said, ‘I need a piece of that.’”
Among other things, Urist’s art addresses ideas about the environment, in part by using materials in unusual ways. She used parts of the tree she discovered on Instagram, known as the Brown’s Meadow Oak, to create one of two related works in Transformations. Fragmented Memories, made of paper over wood, expands a milling pattern into pieces the viewers can remove and keep, thus involving them in the work’s evolution. Bonded Memories, made of paper embossed with the oak’s rings, imagines the tree reassembled.
“I wasn’t searching for something like that tree at that time,” Urist says. “But I was letting my research guide me in terms of being interested in old-growth trees. And I was actually trying to find some up here in Vermont, so it was kind of serendipitous.”
The work is now on display in the Winterthur galleries area as part of Transformations: Contemporary Artists at Winterthur, which showcases current responses to the traditional forms and objects the institution is known for. The six artists currently represented in Transformations were all part of Winterthur’s Maker-Creator Research Fellowship, a program that provides a stipend and gives access to Winterthur and its staff for research that inspires the work of creative professionals. Also on view is Urist’s Mapping the Impact, a sculpture of leaded glass, copper, and reclaimed wood that resembles a tree stump, and The Ceiling, on the patio of the Galleries Reception Atrium entrance.
It was living in the Green Mountain State that kicked Urist’s interest in trees into high gear. Since colonial days, Vermont has been clear cut many times for mining, agriculture, settlement, and other purposes. Much forest has grown back, but there is no true old growth, so the ecosystem has changed. Urist wants to call attention to the intelligence of trees—the way they communicate chemically, the way they support each other, and their key role in healthy ecosystems. Art is one way to do that.
“I came to the milling patterns by being interested in the interaction between humans and nature, how we turn natural, curvy, inconsistent shapes into linear, industrialized products,” Urist says. “You can see different artistic shapes in there, almost like art deco patterns, and I found that really beautiful but also really sad.”
In other work, Urist lifts the “fingerprints” of trees. From freshly cut logs and stumps that still ooze sap, Urist imprints paper, then dusts it with graphite to highlight the ring pattern. Each is as unique as a human fingerprint.
“My interest in art in general is about connecting, seeing patterns in life and nature that maybe other people don’t see, or just connecting them in different ways than other people do,” Urist says. “The tree rings are the lifeline and literal timeline of the tree made into a physical shape. I just want people to think about it in a different way, think about our own consumption and how we use these beings to be objects and building materials when they existed for so long before that.”
Urist’s work, and the work of the other Transformations artists, is currently on view in the galleries area.
If you answered “yes” to the above, consider applying to the 2025 Teen Volunteer Program. Participants in this program will meet the curators and artists behind Winterthur’s new Transformations exhibit and will share what they learn about design, history, and craftsmanship with their community! Application is due by March 31, 2025.
What you’ll do
● Go behind the scenes at a world-class museum in your own backyard
● Learn about objects in the museum, how we care for them, and how they inspire new works of art
● Guide young children through hands-on activities and demonstrations
● Develop leadership skills while serving your community
See highlights of the garden and learn the history of Winterthur on this 30-minute narrated tour. The tour begins at the Visitor Center and ends at the museum, with a stop at Enchanted Woods. Included with general admission.March-December. Space and weather permitting.During Point-to-Point each year, garden tram tours are not available.
This English earthenware mug from the late 18th century, created with the practical joker in mind, has a fun secret: a fake frog inside seems poised to leap at the face of the unsuspecting user—a sort of precursor of the ice cube with the fake fly. Fill the mug with a dark liquid, hand to a friend, then enjoy the show. One can only guess how much joy the reaction gave the joker.
Tyler Johnson, Estate Guide
Frog Mug
England, 1770-1790
Gift of Osborne R. and Mary M. Soverel in memory of Lilian Wilkinson Boschen, 1992.0040
Discover the history and stewardship of the Winterthur landscape as you travel to the far corners of the estate to explore aspects of geology and ecology and hear fascinating stories about local history, flora, and fauna. Reservations recommended. $10 with admission. $5 for Members. Weather and space permitting.Please call 800.448.3883 or e-mail tourinfo@winterthur.org for more information and to reserve.
Tuesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays through October 26, 11:15 am‒12 pm
A new outdoor bench at Winterthur connects communities through history, memories, and stories.
When you take a seat on the new, beautifully tiled mosaic bench on the patio of the Galleries Reception Atrium, there is much to reflect on.
There is The Ceiling, a gazebo-like sculpture with a glass roof that is part of Transformations: Contemporary Artists at Winterthur, which represents creator Stefania Urist’s interest in the intersection of people and nature.
There is a section of trunk from the Brown’s Meadow Oak, a 300-year-old tree toppled by a tornado on the estate in 2020. The ancient giant inspired other works by Urist and another Transformations artist, Rob Finn, who painted its portrait in watercolor, a striking memorial to the stately tree.
Then there is the bench itself.
Obviously contemporary, the bench has more connections to Winterthur’s world-class collection of traditional American decorative arts than meets the eye. On closer inspection, one can see references to the Winterthur collection in the many tiles that incorporate bits of ceramic dishware and in the bench design itself, which reflects a continuum of fine craftsmanship and design often associated with the museum objects inside. This is Winterthur reimagined in tile and concrete.
The mosaic bench is part of a new exhibition, Upcycled!, which asks viewers to consider how old things can be reused creatively while also creating a community by working with local nonprofit organizations to make and display works of art. The work of many hands, the bench is an expression of caring that unites Winterthur and project partner Creative Vision Factory with Duffy’s Hope Garden in Wilmington and the New Castle County Hope Center, which provides transitional housing for the homeless. Winterthur’s collaboration with these partners included support and supplies for Creative Vision Factory artists to create benches at Winterthur, Duffy’s Hope Garden, and the Hope Center, as well as support for a tile monument at the Delaware State Hospital’s historic Spiral Cemetery that memorializes more than 700 souls who died in state care without being claimed by family between 1891 and 1983.
At Winterthur, the mosaic tiling on the bench includes fragments of donated dinnerware and other ceramics—even some pieces from Joe and Jill Biden’s vice-presidential home—all associated with the feelings, thoughts, memories, and homes of their donors and the experience of volunteers who made them into something new.
“All of this is about telling the stories of people’s lives, both in the past and the present, and connecting them, often by either using things to remember them by or by thinking about the things that surrounded their lives and what their lives were like,” says Catharine Dann Roeber, interim director of Academic Programs at Winterthur. “For example, the people living at the Delaware State Hospital, what were their lives like? How can we learn from that and improve them?”
The question is especially poignant at Winterthur. A former family home filled with 90,000 historical objects ranging from everyday domestic items to the finest examples of decorative arts, Winterthur co-sponsors two graduate programs with the University of Delaware, one in material culture studies and one in conservation. In both programs, students study, care for, and interpret the belongings and lifeways of people in the past. Every object—a bit of a plate or a fancy piece of furniture—can reveal clues to past lives.
“That scholarship connects to thinking about people who are trying to set up a home in the Hope Center or someplace else, who just need that space to call home to be able to live their lives to the fullest,” Roeber says. “That is totally connected in a really exciting way to the things that we think about in a historical sense here.
“The process of making and craft is something that we study. There is a value not only from the aesthetics of things, but the actual process of making serves a purpose. Each tile has a story to tell.”
Two alumni of the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Material Culture, Benét Burton and Molly Mapstone, originated the effort as students by identifying partners in a community art project that would make people aware of Winterthur and strengthen community connections and caring.
They found Michael Kalmbach and Creative Vision Factory, whose mission is to foster the creative potential of individuals on the behavioral health spectrum in a studio art environment that cultivates integration with the local art community through exhibitions, workshops, and communal workspace. Creative Vision Factory in turn identified Friends of the Spiral Cemetery, Duffy’s Hope, and the Hope Center as partners and project sites. It also coordinated workshops where volunteers and clients could create the tiles. Eliza Jarvis and Jonathan Whitney of Flux Creative added additional support and community connections to the project.
“We did what we had hoped to do, create a ripple effect at every stage. It is a beautifully unfolding partnership,” Roeber says. “We’re connecting threads and beginning to set the stage for future collaborations.”
One future collaboration may be the tiling of a tunnel on the Jack Markell Trail that cuts through an extensive Potters Field near the existing Spiral Cemetery, which was disrupted during the construction of route I-295. The murals can bring attention to important history at the site and complement additional endeavors to create a place of memory for those who rest there.