Both: A Portrait in Two Parts by Douglas Crase

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(Hardcover)

  • Publisher: Knopf Publishing Group
  • Pub. Date: April 2004
  • ISBN-13: 9780375422669
  • 320pp
 
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Synopsis

Both is the enchanting account of a remarkable fifty-year relationship: Dwight Ripley, the child heir to an American railroad fortune, and Rupert Barneby, the product of a wealthy, baronial English upbringing, shared an obsession with botany from the moment they met at an exclusive boys' boarding school in England. Together they embarked on a lifelong pursuit of rare plants, first in Europe and then in the United States, where they migrated in the late 1930s. Every spring they explored the American Southwest in a sputtering Dodge, discovering new species and cultivating the spoils at their renowned home gardens. Barneby published so many taxonomic findings that he became a world authority on legumes. But the two men had other interests as well: they were intimates in the expatriate circles that included W. H. Auden and Peggy Guggenheim, and early collectors of painters such as Jackson Pollock and Joan Miró. Ripley, a prescient artist himself, whose startling work in colored pencil was lost in a trunk for several decades before being rediscovered, used his fortune to bankroll much of the avant-garde art scene of the early 1950s.

The lives of Ripley and Barneby were shaped by a passion for knowing the world in all its lush particulars. Douglas Crase, who received an education in character when he came to know Barneby in the 1970s, offers us not just the brilliantly told story of "both," but a vivid portrait of the bohemian postwar period they inhabited, bristling with the energy of the new.

The New Yorker

The author and his lover, close friends of the late botanist Rupert Barneby, were given several hundred drawings made by Barneby’s partner of forty-eight years, Dwight Ripley; here Crase honors that legacy. Ripley and Barneby first met while students at Harrow, united by a mania for plants. (Ripley, for instance, had cultivated a garden containing nothing but parsleys.) Their attachment cost Barneby his inheritance, but the orphaned Ripley had money. They moved to America and fashioned a new family among the artistic élite of New York; Ripley funded the Tibor de Nagy gallery and Barneby continued his taxonomical labors at the New York Botanical Garden. Crase’s work, as its title playfully suggests, is itself a kind of reclassification, in which taxonomy becomes poetry, paintings serve as love letters, and gardens rival art. Barneby and Ripley owned a birdcage topped by a fishbowl; from certain angles, the glass sphere appeared to contain bird and fish together. Crase’s intricate construction—capturing now one man, now both—is similarly tantalizing.

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