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 »
Visit the former dairy and farm and enjoy expansive views of the landscape. Hear stories of estate history and learn about repurposed work areas and historic buildings. 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, 3:15 pm
Enjoy the health benefits of hiking while exploring Winterthur’s trail system on this one-hour guided walk. Included with admission. Members free.Please call 800.448.3883 or e-mail tourinfo@winterthur.org for more information and to reserve.
Without the adornment of leaves and flowers, the structure of the landscape is laid bare in intimate, vivid details and provides a clear view of far-reaching vistas. Its imposing tree trunks show off their powerful roots, shining in the spotlight of a winter sun. The fragrant and vibrant evergreens, no longer overpowered by showy blooms, take center stage. And the landscape, in its naked beauty, offers a true connection to nature.
Each season at Winterthur offers its own unique delights, but winter is perhaps the most inimitable of all as the bones of the landscape are exposed, offering an appreciation for the raw beauty of nature, sprinkled with little treasures of color from winter berries and flowers. The quiet solitude is a peaceful retreat from the busyness of everyday life.
Dan Feinberg’s Radish Project could prove a solution where asphalt paving is a problem.
When Dan Feinberg sees a large expanse of unused asphalt such as the parking lot of an abandoned big box store, he sees damage he’d like to mitigate. So Dan and a colleague from Berea College, soil scientist Mary Parr, are experimenting with a way to break up that surface through plants.
In a corner of the parking lot at the Brown Horticulture Learning Center and on a short stretch of road leading to the Dairy Barn, Feinberg has planted about 1,500 tillage radishes in patterns inspired by the parquet floor of the Empire Parlor and rugs in the Marlboro Room and the Port Royal Parlor. Tillage radishes were bred to relieve soil compaction. At Winterthur, Feinberg hopes they will break up the asphalt.
Visitors can view the project as part of Transformations: Contemporary Artists at Winterthur, which shows how the collection inspires makers and creators today. Feinberg came to Winterthur though its Maker-Creator Fellowship program, which provides special access to the collections and staff for research and inspiration. Opened in September 2021, Transformations is a multi-year commitment to showing the work of contemporary artists and makers in the galleries and garden.
If successful, the project will encourage greening, revitalize nutrients in the underlying soil for the benefit of plants that will eventually replace the radishes, and promote drainage to reduce pollution and other environmental damage from the runoff of surface water.
Feinberg saw the problems created by large areas of asphalt paving at home in the historic village of Paint Lick, Kentucky, where a buildup of asphalt increases problems during heavy rains and floods.
“I look at this big parking lot every day and see plants growing through the cracks,” Feinberg says. “Then I started to wonder if we could use plants to help mitigate the problem.”
With a special interest in patterns, Feinberg, a professor of art at Berea, found Winterthur rich with examples in its collections of wallpapers and textiles. Most people see vegetation growing through asphalt as a sign of dereliction or neglect. “By planting radishes in patterns, we send an intentional signal that a problem is being addressed,” Feinberg says.
In spring 2021, he spent about a month mapping the planting area, marking the patterns, drilling an estimated 1,500 holes—three-quarters of an inch in diameter—through the asphalt, planting radish seeds with compost from Winterthur and help from Winterthur staff, and then waited while nature took its course.
Fracturing around some holes mean the first planting of radishes is working. The holes will be re-seeded every fall and spring. Feinberg is studying light cycles and other conditions as he determines when best to plant. Winterthur staff will document the project’s progress.
Photographic documentation will result in a surprising, augmented reality project that will be revealed in the house in coming years. For now, visitors can see the radishes growing on the Winterthur property.
Go behind the scenes and tour the world-famous conservation laboratories where works of art and cultural heritage are examined, studied, and cared for by Winterthur conservation staff and graduate fellows in the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation. On the hour-long tour, you will visit three labs and meet conservators, scientists, and students to learn about their fascinating and important work. Advance registration required. For ages 8 and up. The tour is a $10 upgrade to General Admission, per person. $5 for Members.
October 2, November 6, and December 4, 2024, and March 12 and April 2, 2025, 1:00–2:30 pm.
Please call 800.448.3883 or e-mail tourinfo@winterthur.org for more information and to reserve.
Elissa Edwards combines historic music and sounds from nature to create a unique soundtrack.
While researching the wide range of historical scores in the Winterthur Library, Elissa Edwards found many pieces that celebrated the rich tradition of nature-themed music.
“I just wanted to look at everything,” Edwards says. “I dug deeply into the music collections and really took a lot of notes, documenting what was there because I was delighted to find this wonderful collection and knew I wanted to revisit it.”
Edwards is an operatically trained exponent of early music, who has a particular interest in historical music manuscript collections owned by women as well as historical music made by women, both of which she wants to raise awareness among modern audiences. Edwards breathed new life into forgotten works from the Winterthur Library by weaving parts of them with sounds from nature to create a soundtrack for the exhibition Outside In: Nature-inspired Design. Her musical creation is part of the Transformations installation of works by contemporary artists.
Transformations highlights work by Winterthur’s Maker-Creator Fellows, who get special access to the collections and staff for research and inspiration. The installations in Transformations celebrate how Winterthur’s landscape and material culture moved the Maker-Creator Fellows to turn their impressions of the past into artistic and experiential representations that comment on the present. Outside In, with its display of bird nests, seashells, and other natural objects, explores how objects from nature inform design motifs of wallpapers, textiles, China, furniture carving, and more, and the ways those themes are integrated into interior designs.
To create the Outside In soundtrack, Edwards first selected the scores from the Winterthur collection that she wanted to record, intending to convey some sense of the breadth of the Winterthur collection. Dr. Basil Considine, a renowned musicologist and former Winterthur fellow, transcribed hand-written scores into modern editions, which made for an effortless collaboration between the musicians.
“I also knew that I wanted to work with female collaborators, then create a variety of different instrumental textures to express the playfulness of the different characteristics that you hear in the music,” she says. These included mimicking birdsong with a flute or plucking the strings of a harpsichord.
“I love the idea of using the harp because there is a beautiful early pedal harp in the Winterthur collection, and while we recorded on a modern harp, I think the sound of the harp has such an alluring quality and really highlights the sumptuousness of the collection,” Edwards says.
In various outdoor locations at Winterthur, Edwards and her husband, Jeremy Sheeler, of Awarehouse Productions, recorded the nature soundscape, capturing the burbling of Clenny Run, the buzzing of insects, and breezes blowing through the trees and meadows. He also recorded Edwards singing, embellished with baroque ornamentation techniques. They were all mixed into the soundtrack by Edwards’s brother, Ryan Edwards, of Coincident Sound.
“I approached the project as if I were the listener, thinking about what would be emotionally gripping to someone who is experiencing all of this for the first time,” Edwards says. “I think the sensory experience of that Brandywine Valley area, being by the river, takes you out of your day-to-day self and allows you to come into a place with a more thoughtful approach to what you’re doing. It’s my hope that the music transports visitors to a place of heightened historical whimsy, this kind of pastoral romanticism, which is experienced whenever you walk the Winterthur grounds and garden. It’s an absolutely delightful place to experience, and I wanted the music to have unique surprises and to captivate the listener.”
Hear Edwards’s composition in Outside In: Nature-inspired Design at Winterthur.See the work of the other Transformations artists in the galleries area.
The Winterthur landscape inspires Nottene’s redesign of the galleries lounge.
Kimberly Hall and Justin Hardison of the artist studio Nottene were looking for a way to expand their pattern design business when they decided to explore wallpaper. They both grew up in houses with wallpaper and had built memories around the images and motifs, and they carried those memories with them into the new venture. They liked wallpaper. They knew how it was made.
“But outside of that, we didn’t the history of it and why people had it,” Hardison says. “We wanted to know more.”
Online searches for more information revealed only one book. Then Hall saw a posting for the Winterthur Maker-Creator Fellowship at the Office of Research at Maryland Institute College of Art, where she is on the faculty. “The idea of being able to use the Winterthur archive and learn about old wallpaper was really appealing,” Hall says. “We found there was so much more to discover.”
Sample books and business records in the Winterthur Library quickly became key sources for understanding the history, design, and trade of wallpaper. Pennsylvania German art and Fraktur became important inspirations, as did frequent walks in the Winterthur Garden, which was a sanctuary to the young family during the Covid-19 pandemic.
“There were just endless things to discover,” Hardison says. “We spent tons of time in the research library, in the collections, going into the galleries, walking the grounds, in the storage areas. Everything felt inspiring.”
The result of their research is reflected in a redesign of the West Galleries Lounge, part of the Transformationsinstallation of works by contemporary artists. Transformations highlights work by Winterthur’s Maker-Creator Fellows, who receive special access to the collections and staff for research and inspiration. The work in Transformationscelebrates how Winterthur’s landscape and material culture moved the Maker-Creator Fellows to turn their impressions of the past into artistic and experiential representations that comment on the present.
In the lounge, usually furnished in a modern style, Hall painted a folk art mural of the Winterthur landscape with depictions of Canada geese, blossoming tree limbs, leaves, twigs, and other objects that found their way into their sketchbooks and photo library while they wandered the grounds. Hardison decorated the shelves with woodblocks carved with similar natural imagery to acknowledge their work as printmakers.
“It almost seemed too obvious that we would do wallpaper in there,” Hardison says. “What are the other options? And because we were so inspired by the grounds and some of the other things in the collection and given the theme of the exhibition, we thought it would be a perfect opportunity to build a mural with a similar kind of aesthetic.”
The effect is as pleasing as that in any Winterthur room where wallpaper—some patterned, some mural-like—plays a key role in the design.
Among what the couple learned at Winterthur, “I was impressed that, for some, wallpaper was very much a prized possession,” Hardison says. “I was very surprised to find out how wallpaper was transported, as opposed to the removable and disposable stuff nowadays. These were prized works of art that people would have pulled back down, carefully packaged, shipped across the Atlantic, and then reinstalled. That was really interesting.”
A close look at the Chinese Parlor at Winterthur, for example, shows how highly regarded the wallpaper was by Winterthur founder Henry Francis du Pont. Made in the early 18th century, du Pont discovered the paper, unused, in a warehouse in Paris. It was so old and so beautiful, he couldn’t bear to cut it to fit the walls of his parlor, so he had the ceilings coved to accommodate its full length.
“One of the things that is so special about the Maker Creator Fellowship is that it makes the collections come alive,” Hall says. “Artists and designers can use the collection to make new things. These objects are meant to be renewed. Learning the history of wallpaper made us feel stronger and more confident in what we were doing. So much of what artists struggle with is that our work is not valued in the way other things are valued. We’re carrying on a tradition that has a history and lineage. It’s culture.”
Nottene’s work, as well as the work of the other Transformations artists, is currently on view. See their lounge design in the gallery of Outside In: Nature-inspired Design at Winterthur.
In 1961, the youngest first lady in American history appointed a reserved octogenarian collector from Delaware to lead her project to restore the White House interiors. The exhibition Jacqueline Kennedy and Henry Francis du Pont: From Winterthur to the White House will tell the story of this historic partnership for the first time at Winterthur, the inspiration for Mrs. Kennedy’s project. The exhibition will run May 7, 2022–January 8, 2023.
When Mrs. Kennedy moved into the most famous house in America, she described its drab interior as a combination of “dentist office and bomb shelter.” Her vision was to bring beauty and history to the White House, aided by her sense of chic. Mr. du Pont’s expertise in decorative arts and design lent credibility to the project. Together, they transformed the White House from a mere public residence into a home of grandeur and historic significance suitable for a president. By establishing a permanent collection of furniture and art, they also created a museum for all Americans.
Their restoration awakened an interest in historic preservation and interior design that is still felt today, culminating in a televised tour of the White House that became the most watched program in American history. “The television tour fascinated generations of Americans and sealed Jacqueline Kennedy in our national imagination as the first lady who brought history and beauty to the White House,” according to guest curator Elaine Rice Bachmann.
Through artifacts, archives, and images, the exhibition invites visitors to experience the behind-the-scenes collaboration between the two during this captivating period in American history. Visitors will learn about the relationship between Mrs. Kennedy and Mr. du Pont, her visit to Winterthur in May 1961, Winterthur’s role in inspiring the design of the White House’s most iconic rooms, the historical significance of the restoration, and the important role Winterthur has played at the White House ever since.
“H. F. du Pont’s role in the Kennedy restoration of the White House positions Winterthur and its influence on American preservation and interiors at the center of this story,” said Alexandra Deutsch, John L. and Marjorie P. McGraw Director of Collections at Winterthur. “Mrs. Kennedy’s iconic visit to Winterthur in 1961 launched her on a path of creating the White House we know today. The interiors of the museum helped shape that lasting vision, which she enacted in just three short years.”
ABOUT WINTERTHUR MUSEUM, GARDEN & LIBRARY
Winterthur—known worldwide for its preeminent collection of American decorative arts, naturalistic garden, and research library for the study of American art and material culture—offers a variety of tours, exhibitions, programs, and activities throughout the year. Admission includes the Winterthur Garden, galleries, and a museum tour (by reservation).
Winterthur, located on Route 52, six miles northwest of Wilmington, Delaware, and five miles south of U.S. Route 1, is open Tuesday–Sunday, 10:00 am–5:00 pm, except during the holiday season, November 20, 2021–January 2, 2022. During the holiday season, Winterthur is open daily, 10:00 am–5:00 pm (house tours by reservation, 10:00 am–4:00 pm with last tour at 3:15 pm) and closed on Thanksgiving and Christmas. General admission is $20 for adults; $18 for students and seniors; $6 for ages 2–11. Holiday admission is $25 for adults; $23 for students and seniors; $6 for ages 2–11. Memberships are available for free and discounted admission. Winterthur is committed to accessible programming for all. For information, including special services, call 800.448.3883, or visit winterthur.org. Winterthur is closed seasonally from early January through late February.
For the latest information on safety guidelines, visit winterthur.org/faq.
In the 1500s, Spaniards introduced domesticated turkeys from the Americas to the world. In other countries, the bird was valued for its exotic appearance as well as its tasty meat. Here, turkeys would come to represent the American Thanksgiving.
This ceramic tureen in the form of a turkey was created in France in the mid-1700s at the Strasbourg factory. (Others were made in Germany and elsewhere.) Though it is tempting to assume it was intended specifically for serving a stew or soup made from turkey, it probably was used to contain a range of tempting hot foods.
Tureens in naturalistic animal and vegetable shapes were popular elements of fashionable table settings. Such a tureen would have been at home on a table with dishes shaped like cabbages or cauliflowers and dinner plates painted with designs inspired by nature. In some cases, moss, potted plants, or flowers helped to complete the theatrical quality of the dinner display.
Winterthur curator Leslie Grigsby has long embraced the idea of bringing nature to her dinner table. For special meals, she often creates a centerpiece by arranging her favorite ceramic animal figures among greenery and fall leaves gathered from outside her home.
Leslie B. Grigsby, senior curator of ceramics and glass
Ceramic turkey tureen, Strasbourg factory, France, 1750-1760
“Autumn and apple-picking are always paired thoughts in my mind, and the squared form of this basket when made by tinsmiths was used for apples, but this one is made from translucent cattle horn. The S-curved sides are engraved and pierced with the American national eagle and stars surrounded by leaves and blooming flowers very much in the manner of lady’s high back combs of the 1830s. I knew the hair comb industry was prolific, but horn baskets are unusual survivors. When I found this one in an antique shop, it was a natural fit for the collection. With a little help from Winterthur’s conservators to make new laces and stabilize the sides, it is now ready for display.”
Ann Wagner, senior curator
Basket, probably made in Rhode Island or Massachusetts, ca. 1830-50
Museum purchase with funds drawn from the Centenary Fund, 2016.0020