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Arts + Entertainment 2.20.25

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ARTS + ENTERTAINMENT FEBRUARY 20, 2025

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GARDEN PARTY FOR

Selby Gardens honors George Harrison’s healing pastime with an astonishing exhibition.

An overhead view of the colorful Kolam Garden in the “George Harrison: A Gardener’s Life” exhibition, which runs through June 29 at Selby Gardens.

MONICA ROMAN GAGNIER ARTS + ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR

I

f you grew up in the ’60s, you’ll know that each member of the Beatles had a persona. Paul was the cute Beatle, John was brainy, Ringo was fun and George was quiet, and then later on, mystical. Well, it turns out that George was also the gardening Beatle. Who knew? People on the other side of the pond do because they are familiar with Friar Park, the Victorian estate restored by Harrison and his wife, Olivia, in Henley-onThames, England. But thanks to Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, we Yanks can also learn about George’s gardening prowess and how it helped him cultivate a sense of peacefulness — without taking a plane across the Atlantic. It’s the fashion among museums and other cultural institutions (Selby considers itself a “living” museum) to mount ambitious shows with boldface names to get audiences knocking down the gates. In a world filled with fickle patrons and uncertain government funding for the arts, the name of the game is generating the low-level anxiety that has been dubbed “FOMO” (Fear Of Missing Out). Some of these splashy endeavors land with a bellyflop or worse yet, are greeted with a yawn. “George Harrison: A Gardener’s Life” avoids the pitfalls of a tenuous connection, crass commercialism or dissonance. It’s enchanting, sublime and spiritual, as nature is itself. First and foremost, this achievement is due to the participation of Harrison’s widow, Olivia, a record industry producer whom he married in 1978 shortly before the birth of their son, Dhani. She became a true life partner for George and, since his death, conservator of his legacy. Under the stewardship of Selby President and CEO Jennifer Rominiecki and Chief Curator David Berry, an Oxford Ph.D. who is veteran of The Ringling, Selby has created an astonishing living memorial to George (all Beatles are forever known by their first name) that whispers but never shouts. What makes the Selby Gardens tribute to George even more stunning is that it was put together by the living museum’s team of 80 employees and 800 volunteers in the wake of last year’s hurricanes and not long after 2 million twinkling lights were taken down from its holiday “Lights in Bloom” exhibition.

Monica Roman Gagnier

A “garden” of guitars pays tribute to George Harrison’s song, “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.”

Images courtesy of Ryan Gamma

“George Harrison: A Gardener’s Life” is the ninth installment of the annual Jean and Alfred Goldstein Exhibition Series. Last year’s show focused on the relationship between the artists Yayoi Kusama and Georgia O’Keefe, while the 2023 exhibition was a tribute to stained glass artist Louis Comfort Tiffany. SEE GEORGE PAGE 2

A silhouette of a hand is filled with bromeliads inside the Selby Gardens Conservatory.


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