Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Muse | Page 3

Photo by Richard Cheek A Treasured Source of Inspiration… & a Modern Day Muse By Bree D. Harvey, Vice President of External Affairs Edited by Lauren Marsh, Communications, Grants & Events Coordinator W hen the members of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society consecrated Mount Auburn in 1831, they did so with a vision for a place that would commemorate the dead, console the bereaved, and inspire the living. And though it was their intention to attract the living and inspire these visitors with the landscape’s natural beauties and its many features—the works of art, the horticultural specimens, and the stories of those buried at the Cemetery—the founders could never have envisioned the extent to which this sacred ground would, indeed, come to serve as a creative muse. Throughout the eighteen decades that have since passed, Mount Auburn has inspired generations of creative individuals. In the nineteenth century, writers like Caroline Frances Orne (see inset on page 4) celebrated their experiences at the Cemetery in prose and verse. Daguerreotypists Southworth and Hawes, some of the earliest practitioners of the new art form, chose Mount Auburn’s dramatic landscape as the subject for some of their early experiments with photography (see inset on page 6). Today, designers, writers, painters, and photographers continue to find inspiration within our 175 acres. Julie Moir Messervy, Amy Clarkson, Jessie Brown, and Richard Cheek are among those for whom Mount Auburn now serves as muse. Like the generations of those who have done so before, they have drawn upon personal experience to celebrate the Cemetery’s many virtues, each telling a unique story of Mount Auburn in their chosen medium. Fall/Winter 2011 | 1