Seeds of Wisdom, 2023
Returning for its second year on The Greenway, Roxbury Sunflower Project: Seeds of Wisdom (2023) is a multi-site public artwork consisting of three large-scale sunflower installations throughout the park. This project is an extension of Holmes’ growing Roxbury Sunflower Project, which began in 2018 as a vision to use sunflowers to spread beauty and hope throughout the historically Black Boston neighborhood where the artist has lived since childhood.
Building upon last year’s sunflower plantings in Dewey Square, this year’s project features ten different varieties of sunflowers throughout the park. Each landscape is dotted with bright golden signage featuring quotes curated by the artist to inspire, support, and nurture Boston’s younger generations.
Photos by Lee-Daniel Tran
Sunflowers are heliotropic plants, which means they turn and shift to follow the movement of the sun through the sky each day. For Holmes, sunflowers represent resilience, inner beauty, self-determination and the ability for a community to evolve and emerge while staying deeply grounded in its history and traditions. “Sunflowers have a radiance that sustains us by inviting us to turn toward the light in all things,” she shares. the sunflowers are dotted with bright golden signage featuring poetry and quotations of inspiration curated by Holmes that speak to the importance of engaging, supporting, and nurturing Boston’s youth and upcoming generations.
Beyond The Greenway, Roxbury Sunflower Project will be growing across the city of Boston this summer: through a partnership with the Friends of Martin’s Park and Hurst Landscaping, sunflower installations have also been planted in Martin’s Park in the Seaport and a large open lot in neighborhood of Grove Hall.
Roxbury Sunflower Project: Seeds of Wisdom (2023) is collaboratively organized, planned, and planted by an interdisciplinary team at The Greenway and beyond: Ekua Holmes, London Parker-McWhorter, Darrah Cole, Tori Hiney, Sam Trulli, David Hurst and team, Gina Lindner, Audrey Lopez, Joey Pellegrino and the team at PowerCorps BOS, a City of Boston program, Jen Coyne and Sierra Rothberg of Lusterity Design + Events, and Greenway volunteers.
For 2022’s iteration of the Roxbury Sunflower Project, sunflowers were planted throughout Dewey Square to complement and grow alongside Breathe Life Together, the mural from Rob “ProBlak” Gibbs (another Roxbury-native artist). Planted in collaboration with co-caretakers and volunteers from the United Neighbors of Lower Roxbury Community Garden, the 2022 project on Dewey Square featured four varieties of sunflowers in mini-landscapes that spoke to the power of art as a tool of self-determination to change one’s mindset and community. Roxbury Sunflower Project: Seeds of Love and Justice (2022) was organized and planted in collaboration with an interdisciplinary team at the Greenway and beyond: Ekua Holmes, London McWhorter, Kai Holmes, Audrey Lopez, Abby Parker, Darrah Cole, Sheila Novak, Sam Trulli, Sophie Pollock, co-caretakers and volunteers from the United Neighbors of Lower Roxbury Community Garden, Copper Civic Collective volunteers, and Greenway horticulture volunteers. Special thanks to Tarik Bartel for documenting our process.
The Roxbury Sunflower Project is a community-wide, collaborative initiative founded in 2018 by artist Ekua Holmes through a Now + There: Public Art Accelerator Fellowship. The project aims to bring nature, beauty, and color to the Roxbury landscape in unloved and uncared for public lots or in private gardens and yards by inviting families, organizations, and agencies to plant 20,000 sunflowers a year in the Roxbury neighborhood and across Boston. Seeds, instruction, and encouragement are provided free of charge. The Roxbury Sunflower Project positions the sunflower as a symbolic representation of contemporary Roxbury, its people, and history and to bring nature, beauty, and color through community-wide sunflower plantings.
The project’s goals are to:
INSPIRE a community-wide action of planting seeds, harvesting flowers, and documenting the process with photography, art, and video;
INSTALL lush and colorful mini-landscapes around Grove Hall in Roxbury and Dorchester;
EMBRACE the Sunflower as an emblem of spirit and history of Roxbury;
EMPOWER youth to lead and influence their neighborhoods.
For more about the project, please visit Roxbury Sunflower Project’s website and Instagram.