When I went out to the address he'd given me in Brooklyn, I expected to be visiting his workshop studio. I was, but it is also his home, in a brownstone that I recognized not just because of the address I'd been given but because of the Koi pond with turtles out front and the living wall growing on the side of the building. It was still a bit cool, and the day was rainy, but everything looked thriving and full of life. And that was just the beginning - when I went inside, there were more living walls indoors, and then Gennaro took me out to the back yard terrace that overlooked a fresh water swimming pool with an adult sized child's dream of a treehouse just beyond, with a variety of blooming spring and early summer plants beginning to bud, thriving and cascading in a gorgeous array of living colors and textures, seemingly wild, while being gently landscaped to reach their full potential on the canvas of the back yard.
My grandmother used to tell me stories about growing up in Manhattan on Hudson near Gaansvoort Street, above the bakery that her father owned and all nine children worked in. In those days there were no trees lining the streets the way they do in the West Village now, and when the family moved out to Brooklyn, she told me how surprised she was to see so many trees. She used to sit on her stoop and look at her surroundings thinking, "There must be more to life than this," and I think if she had ever met Gennaro Brooks-Church, she would have experienced the more that she was looking for.
As I began to write this piece and tried to think of a title, the first word that came to my mind was verdant. There is something about the spaces and even the individual walls that Gennaro creates that makes me think about the rich greens of nature in all their many hues. But that didn't seem enough, and then I started to think about adding the word luxury, but somehow that didn't seem right either. Although it is a luxurious experience to wander in Gennaro's back yard and his rooftop where he has a cascading fountain waterfall, what he is doing is bringing that luxury into every day settings and helping to bring us back to the place where we are connected to the earth around us. As I wrote a few weeks ago when I was writing about the artist Sandra DeSando, there have been studies done that show that the more time we spend in nature, even just simply breathing in the air and scent of dirt, the more positive our outlook, the less stress we feel, and the healthier we are in mind, body and spirit. That shouldn't be a luxury, it should be something available to us all, and Gennaro Brooks-Church has the ability to build living walls and green roofs, and to create environments that help us to get back to nature in the surroundings of our urban life. He can also build walls that are gardens, able to feed families during winter months or any months in the city, and he is able to design living walls for out-of-doors and building facades that will winter over and renew in spring. Originally a photographer, he has the eye and creative mind of a visual artist. Not only are the pieces and spaces he creates beautiful, vibrant and unique, they are practical and environmentally sound because he uses reclaimed wood and recycled materials and has developed a system that makes them easier to maintain and healthier over the long term.
For someone like me who loves plants and gardening, or for someone like my grandmother who knew that the trees around her in Brooklyn were just the tip of a verdant iceberg, Gennaro Brooks-Church has the ability to bring us all to a healthier space. And that's why I finally settled on the word verdure - when you look it up the first definition is lush, green vegetation, and the second, the fresh green color of vegetation. The third is a condition of freshness. Then you find greenness, especially of fresh, flourishing vegetation, and then freshness in general, flourishing condition, vigor. All of those things roll into the expression of health and well-being that you find in the spaces that Gennaro Brooks-Church creates, and as much of a language lover as I am, I also like the sound of the word and the echoes of ancient civilizations within its Latin roots. Verdure it is and because of its verdure it will stand, vigorously thriving and growing and bringing health and healing to us all.
Gennaro Brooks-Church
At Eco-Brooklyn
A Natural Fresh Water Swimming Pool
An Urban Oasis
Room For The Family Dog To Explore
Painting Indoor Tapestries With Verdant Life
Living Walls And Green Environments
For Every Space
Photographs Courtesy Of
Gennaro Brooks-Church
Preparing The Rooftop Waterfall
For Warmer Weather
A Tree Grows In Brooklyn
With Abundance
A Treehouse Built For Gardeners
And Nature Lovers Of Any Age
Blessings,
Jannie Susan
Beautiful work by a beautiful man. this work is Healing
ReplyDeleteYes, I agree, he is a healer. Very beautiful, special, important and extraordinary work.
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