At Traywick Contemporary,
Amanda Marchand & Leah Sobsey: This Earthen Door offers a thoughtful dialogue between photography, botany, and literary history. On view from May 2 to June 27, 2026, the exhibition takes as its point of departure the herbarium created by Emily Dickinson during her teenage years—a carefully assembled book of pressed plants containing more than 400 specimens. Preserved today at Harvard’s Houghton Library, the fragile archive remains largely inaccessible in physical form, surviving mainly through digital documentation. Marchand and Sobsey revisit this historical object not as a fixed artifact, but as a living framework for contemporary ecological reflection.
The collaboration began more than five years ago, when the artists cultivated plant species from Dickinson’s original herbarium in their own gardens in Quebec and North Carolina. From these living specimens, they recreated pages of the herbarium using anthotype, a nineteenth-century camera-less photographic process that relies on plant pigments and sunlight rather than traditional chemical development. The resulting images are delicate and time-intensive, requiring days or even months of exposure. Their surfaces hold both the physical trace of the plants and the quiet evidence of duration, patience, and care.
Rather than simply reproducing Dickinson’s archive, Marchand and Sobsey expand it into what they describe as a twenty-first-century herbarium. Their work places historical botanical observation into conversation with contemporary environmental concerns, asking how preservation changes in a time marked by ecological fragility. For the Berkeley presentation, a collaboration with the Point Reyes National Seashore Association introduces a new California-based work using both native and invasive species, drawing attention to restoration efforts and the complex relationships between landscape, stewardship, and human intervention.
The exhibition also reflects the artists’ shared commitment to examining the often-overlooked contributions of women working across science and art. By bringing Dickinson’s botanical practice into the present, they reveal the herbarium not only as a personal study but as an enduring model of observation and connection. At Traywick Contemporary,
This Earthen Door becomes a meditation on memory, ecology, and the fragile act of holding knowledge in material form.
Image:
Amanda Marchand & Leah Sobsey, Blue Delphinium - Plate 35, 2023 © Amanda Marchand & Leah Sobsey, courtesy of Traywick Contemporary