Showing posts with label Terry Tempest Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terry Tempest Williams. Show all posts

Saturday, May 22, 2010

windy lines

Making its way from Gansevoort up to 34th Street in the Meatpacking District, the High Line is a repurposed railway that used to carry freight trains but now, lives on as a public park.

These photos were taken on a particularly windy day, giving the flowers and tall grasses an appearance of rippling waves. What I love most is still being able to see the old rails, to feel the original jungle slowly overtaking our urban one. The High Line is truly a much-needed breath of fresh wilderness splashing through Manhattan's side. It reminds me of Terry Tempest Williams who said: "Why not designate wilderness as an installation of art? ...I cannot live without art. I cannot live without wilderness.” 

Although this "nature as art" concept certainly reflects the High Line, I tend to agree with Anne Matthews, author of Wild Nights: Nature Returns to the City; for her the wilderness is more than a figment of human imagination. Human New Yorkers stare at the skyline and see the full swell of human ingenuity and convenience for “the city is truly home: time spent anywhere else is camping, or exile." In many ways, it is true that mankind has dominated over nature; the city is the ultimate testament to man’s marvel and meddling. For many of us, New York is our fortress. And yet, there is a return of falcons and even coyotes and beneath the city resides estuary, salt marsh, woodland, beach, freshwater river, and prairie--six natural habitats that truly define the city of New York. For me, this attests to the constant struggle and interchangeability between the natural and urban worlds. So when I visit the High Line, I still like to think that its well-groomed "natural elements" are creeping, invading, and engulfing. 

“The natural world [will] redefine a city with guerrilla persistence, reaching and twining in the night, leaf by tendril by thorn…nature exploited every edge, every niche.”