Old Man’s Garden – Annora Brown’s classic manuscript is now republished with some of her paintings and a new cover.
In the 1930’s and 1940’s Annora Brown used pen-and-ink to show people the values she was learning while studying the culture of the Blackfoot People. Her work was noticed, and it made a difference to people like myself. She helped me learn to appreciate Aboriginal People and helped me ask why so many of “the public” shunned or abused them. Eventually I also started asking why such negative attitudes were promoted by people considered to be “in power”.
Annora Brown had learned from earliest childhood to be fascinated when she heard the Indians beat drums and sing and saw the dancing – for this is what it was like in her home-town of Fort Macleod on special occasions. As an adult she learned about their stories, and the way they devoted their lives to having a close relationship with Nature. With pen-and-ink she drew simple pictures depicting what she observed. Eventually she convinced Dent & Sons to publish her illustrations in their Canadian school-textbooks (in the 1930’s & 1940’s). “Totem, Tipi and Tumpline” was one of my favorite books.
From out of this same feast of Indigenous learnings Annora researched and assembled material for a manuscript. Her book, Old Man’s Garden, was so unique it took twenty years before her publisher (Dent & Sons) committed it to print (in 1954). It is now considered a classic and has been reprinted for the 3 rd time, 61 years later.
In the book she identified and listed the scientific and common names of 160 wild-flowers and plants from southwestern Alberta. Then, with pen-and-ink she illustrated 120 fauna examples. She also assembled a collection of legends and lore about these plants – from the diaries of explorers and travellers and from the oral stories of the Blackfoot People. Annora Brown, the historian, botanist, writer, artist and educator, wanted to let readers know all they could about Napi’s Garden. She dedicated the book to “all nature lovers everywhere … and especially my parents who taught me love and respect for Nature”.
Annora’s original Introduction in Old Man’s Garden 1954 tells us “(that this) book gossips about the flowers” and acknowledges that these First Nations People “have added so greatly to the world collection of beautiful thoughts”.
In addition to the reprinted classic, Rocky Mountain Books has augmented this Old Man’s Garden (2020) with a new cover and a sampler of 12 of Annora’s original paintings (in watercolour and oil). Included is a Forward by Rev. Sidney Black, Indigenous Anglican Blackfoot Bishop of Treaty 7. Art curator Mary-Beth Laviolette has not only written Introductory Notes , but has worked out the multiple details required by the publisher. The painting images include Blackfoot Tipis and regalia, and landscapes and flora from the Waterton Park Region.
This 2020 edition of Old Man’s Garden is indeed a treasure “for all who have love and respect for Nature!
(see www.annorabrown.ca )
June 26, 2020 – Correction by Mary-Beth Laviolette to Sasse column on OMG
Mary-Beth Laviolette noted – Scratchboard drawings by Annora Brown, are found in Old Man’s Garden. This makes them even more unique. “Scratchboard is a form of direct engraving where the artist scratches off dark ink to reveal a white or colored layer beneath. Scratchboard refers to both a fine-art medium, and an illustrative technique using sharp knives and tools for engraving into a thin layer of white China clay that is coated with dark, often black India ink.” (see Wikipedia)
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