Pavilion in the Trees (1993)

by Martin Puryear (b. 1941)

Photo Caption: Photo Alec Rogers © 2017 for the Association for Public Art
Lansdowne Glen, Horticulture Center grounds, off North Horticultural Drive, West Fairmount Park
1993

  • Title

    Pavilion in the Trees

  • Artist

    Martin Puryear (b. 1941)

  • Year

    1993

  • Medium

    Debarked western red cedar (posts and framing); clear, heart white oak (decking, handrails, and benches); clear, heart redwood (canopy); chain-link fencing

  • Dimensions

    Walkway: width 5′, length 60′, Deck: height 13 1/2″; width 13 1/2″; 24′ above ground Latticed canopy: height 11′; width 16′; depth 16′ Overall height approximately 35′

  • Themes

    Black and African American Themes and Artists, Functional Public Art

Commissioned by the Fairmount Park Art Association (now the Association for Public Art)

Owned by the City of Philadelphia


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At A Glance

  • Developed as part of the Association for Public Art’s Form and Function program

  • A sixty-foot walkway leads across a natural basin to an observation platform that rises twenty-four feet above the ground

  • Inspired by the universal childhood longing for a tree house

  • Please check the hours for the Horticulture Center grounds before your visit

Martin Puryear's "Pavilion in the Trees" in the Snow
Photo Wayne Cozzolino © 1994 for the Association for Public Art

Martin Puryear’s Pavilion in the Trees is an amenity located near the Horticulture Center in West Fairmount Park. Conceived in 1981, the public artwork was developed as part of the Fairmount Park Art Association’s (now the Association for Public Art) Form and Function program. The original model included a steep set of stairs, but the artist decided to substitute a sloping ramp for aesthetic and safety reasons.

Situated high among the treetops, the work has become a much-favored place to relax and contemplate nature from a bird’s-eye view

Puryear – whose retrospective exhibition was shown at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1992 – worked with architect Samuel Harris, at the time with the firm Kieran Timberlake and Harris, to realize the project, which was supported by the Pew Charitable Trusts, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. Inspired by the universal childhood longing for a tree house, Pavilion consists of an open structure supported by a series of posts.

All of the materials – western red cedar, heart white oak, heart redwood – were selected for their natural durability. A sixty-foot walkway leads across a natural basin to an observation platform – a square deck covered by a latticed canopy – that rises twenty-four feet above the ground. Situated high among the treetops, the work has become a much-favored place to relax and contemplate nature from a bird’s-eye view.

Directions by Car: Exit Rt. 76 at Montgomery Drive and continue west toward Belmont Avenue. Turn left at entrance to the Horticulture Center/Japanese House and Garden. Pavilion in the Trees is in the Lansdowne Glen, behind the Horticulture Center.

Voices heard in the Museum Without Walls: AUDIO program: Martin Puryear, the artist who created Pavilion in the Trees, was inspired by his childhood longing for a tree house. He is heard on archival tape courtesy Art 21, Inc. Bob Taylor, a woodworker who specializes in custom millwork, built the canopy for Pavilion in the Trees at Martin Puryear’s direction. Michael Auping is the former Chief Curator of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas. He contributed to the volume Martin Puryear, published on the occasion of the artist’s exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. | Segment Producer: Lu Olkowski

Museum Without Walls: AUDIO is the Association for Public Art’s award-winning audio program for Philadelphia’s outdoor sculpture. Available for free by phone, mobile app, or online, the program features more than 150 voices from all walks of life – artists, educators, civic leaders, historians, and those with personal connections to the artworks.

 

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Cover of the Form and Function book, which shows a black and white view of the cityTo bridge the gap between public art and ordinary life, the Fairmount Park Art Association (now the Association for Public Art) initiated the pioneering program Form and Function in 1980. The Association invited artists to propose public art projects for Philadelphia that would be utilitarian, site-specific, and integral to community life—works that would be integrated into the public context through use as well as placement.

Each artist was asked to give meaning or identity to a place, to probe for the genius loci, or the “spirit of the place.” The Association for Public Art’s intention was to respond to the needs of a changing city, as well as to accommodate the expressions of individual artists.

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This artwork is part of the Around the Horticulture Center tour

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