HomeNewsWorldAt This Staten Island Garden, the Plants Are All Queer

At This Staten Island Garden, the Plants Are All Queer

One example slated for the garden is the jack-in-the-pulpit, a plant with green and maroon striped flowers and red berries. It switches genders from year to year, based on environmental conditions.

June 04, 2023 / 20:29 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

The Alice Austen House on Staten Island celebrates the life of trailblazing photographer Alice Austen, who lived there in the mid-19th and early 20th centuries. The stately house by the bay, now a National Historic Landmark, has stunning views of Brooklyn and lower Manhattan, and features a selection of some 7,000 photographs taken by Austen of New York City in the Victorian era.

Amid its rolling, verdant grounds and vine-covered porch, there’s also a new initiative in the works: the Queer Ecologies Garden Project. It’s something of a misnomer, since many plants and flowers, to use human terms, are transgender or bisexual, in that they can change sex or have both reproductive organs and can self-pollinate, said Marisa Prefer, a Brooklyn-based horticulturist who identifies as nonbinary and who consulted on creating the garden.

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With this new venture, Prefer and Victoria Munro, the executive director of the Alice Austen House, aim to celebrate this widespread gender-fluidity of the natural world while focusing on plants that are particularly loud and proud in their functions, or are culturally associated with the LGBTQ community in some important way.

“It sort of challenges the notion that being queer is a choice,” Munro said of the project. “If nature is doing it, it’s natural.”