Lewis' Blue Flax, Blackburnian Warbler
- ink on tyvek
- Nancy Friedemann-Sánchez
-
Not For Sale
Lewis’ Blue Flax
Linum lewisii (Pursh)
Haȟúŋtahu (Lakȟóta)
This plant species—also known as Wild Blue Flax—was named for Meriwether Lewis, of Lewis & Clark fame. The Lewis & Clark expedition was also a naturalist expedition, its ornithic discoveries including Clark’s Nutcracker (first described by Clark, of course) and Lewis’s Woodpecker (first described by Lewis). Lewis was also the first naturalist to distinguish the very similar Western Meadowlark from its close Eastern relative, although Audubon gave the species its formal ornithological recognition—and scientific name, Sturnella neglecta—as a species that had previously been neglected, until Lewis came along.
Blackburnian Warbler
Setophaga fusca (Statius Müller)
Sitúpi waŋblíla (Lakȟóta)
The Blackburnian Warbler is one of the most colorful warblers that grace the eastern Great Plains a few weeks a year on its migratory journey back or forth to Canada. One might guess that its name comes from the stunning black and burnt orange of its plumage; but one would be wrong. Philipp Ludwig Statius Müller was the zoologist who named the bird, after Anna Blackburne. Anna Blackburne was an English botanist who received the unknown bird from her brother Ashton. Ashton had moved to the United States, where he had shot the poor bird.
For this collection, the artist would like to acknowledge the following people:
Thomas Gannon, Associate Professor, English and Ethnnic Studies, UNL for writing the accompanying texts. Sofía F. Echeverry for her work as studio assistant.
Nancy Friedemann-Sánchez is a Colombo-American, mid-career artist with an interdisciplinary practice. She grew up in Colombia as the child of a Colombian and a United States citizen and migrated to the US as an adult. Her art is about the curious and intense experience of having physically migrated, yet still having a piece of herself rooted in Colombia. She is creating an intersectional feminist visual novel that is a multifaceted project comprised of paintings, sculptures, objects, and mixed media that together—and in different voices—weave a synchronicity of dialogues, passages, and punctuations about hybridity and cultural ownership.
- Created: June 2021
- Inventory Number: 20V.745.2021
- Current Location: University of Nebraska Lincoln - Enterprise Technology at Nebraska Hall - 1400 R St Lincoln, NE 68588 (google map)
- Collections: 1. New Acquisitions, University of Nebraska Lincoln