Back

Discover CALS

See how our current work and research is bringing new thinking and new solutions to some of today's biggest challenges.

|
By Shannon Dortch
  • Cornell Botanic Gardens
  • Plants
  • Environment
  • Nature
Share
In addition to its natural splendor, Cornell Botanic Gardens now boasts an outdoor art installation: a two-story mural, created in September 2019 by Brazilian street artist Eder Muniz.

“A Dança Da Natureza” (The Dance of Nature) incorporates nature, a human figure, animals and stylistic images in bright, vivid colors that enliven the north side of the Nevin Welcome Center. The mural expresses the aura and spirit of plants, with the artist seeing and capturing the colors of nature in ways undetected by most.

Muniz was selected for the project because of his commitment to using his artistry to inspire a dialogue with the public about the balance between humans and nature. With its energy, rich colors and warmth, his work represents Cornell Botanic Gardens’ passion for plants and desire to help people appreciate and connect with them differently.

“Plants for me are the base of everything. Without plants we are not connected to other things,” Muniz said. “Nature is a big surprise all the time. In terms of harnessing the ‘magic’ from the setting, it’s no great surprise – everything is right there!”

Cornell Botanic Gardens commissioned the mural as part of its goal to nurture the unique and personal connections people and cultures have to plants. As visitors round the northeast corner of the welcome center, they encounter the mural, set among the plant collections it depicts and paired with flora from more tropical climes.

“I had sketched the mural, but on arriving at Cornell Botanic Gardens, I was inspired because there were so many kinds of flowers and plants, textures and shapes, forms and colors, too,” Muniz said. “I took a walk in the garden and realized the significance of place, and continued to take walks every day, even after the mural was finished.”

The mural is a striking, artistic expression of the gardens’ strategic direction – to connect people and plants for a world of diversity, beauty and hope, said Christopher Dunn, the Elizabeth Newman Wilds Director of Cornell Botanic Gardens.

“We hope it will touch visitors and inspire them to better understand the essential interdependence between plant diversity and human cultural diversity,” Dunn said.

Muniz helped transform the streetscapes of Salvador, Brazil, through the magic of his art. Fourteen years ago, the mayor of Salvador collaborated with graffiti artists who were part of Muniz’ artist movement known as Calangos. The movement strives to empower graffiti artists to replace tag-ridden streetscapes with social messages using images and art, improving lives of artists and beautifying the city. Today the project employs 43 young artists and has changed the face of Salvador.

Muniz’ mural at Cornell Botanic Gardens was supported, in part, by a grant from the Cornell Council of the Arts, a universitywide cultural organization that provides a platform for the creation of and public discourse on the contemporary arts on campus. While in residence, Muniz presented the Class of 1945 Lecture in Cornell Botanic Gardens’ Fall Lecture Series: “Using Street Art to Inspire a Balance Between Humans and Nature.”

He also discussed his art form, inspiration and process with students in two classes: Introduction to Print Media (ART 2301) and The Art of Horticulture (PLHRT 2010). Student art inspired by Muniz’s mural is on display at the Nevin Welcome Center.

Shannon Dortch is associate director for communications and marketing at Cornell Botanic Gardens.

Header Image: “A Dança Da Natureza” (The Dance of Nature) is a two-story mural completed in 2019 by Brazilian street artist Eder Muniz for the Cornell Botanic Gardens. The work incorporates nature, a human figure, animals and stylistic images in bright, vivid colors. Photo by Lindsay France/Cornell University

This article also appeared in the Cornell Chronicle.

Keep Exploring

Hand watering a small sprout in the ground

News

New York Attorney General Letitia James has directed $1.1 million to support the new Cornell College of Agriculture and Life Sciences New York Soil Health Climate Smart Agriculture Fund, aimed at working with farmers to promote healthy soils.

  • School of Integrative Plant Science
  • Soil
person hauling in a tow net

News

The Great Lakes Fishery Commission recently funded a Cornell DNRE and CBFS group for a new two-year project “Evaluating mysid abundance in Lake Michigan using two decades of fisheries acoustic data.” This project will involve DNRE graduate...
  • Biological Field Station
  • Ashley School of Global Development and the Environment
  • Natural Resources and the Environment Section