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Ancestor garden: Community plants butterfly garden honoring Detroiters lost to COVID-19

In an era of isolation, 

community is needed

more than ever

 

This U-M graduate

brings people together

 

to connect, heal, and grow

through art and collaboration

 

CHISARA BROWN

CITY PLANNER

City of Detroit

So often, you’re bombarded with everything that doesn’t represent peace. And so to be able to have a place like this in the middle of the community is important. 

 

Artist Doug Jones’

current project 

is an “ancestor garden”

in Detroit

 

We are in what is called the Virginia Park community.

The garden is going to promote the entire lifecycle of butterflies.

 

DOUG JONES

ARTIST

BA, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts

University of Michigan

We are really talking about transformation and growth. The feature besides the plants themselves is the Ancestor Posterity Chair created by Errin Whitaker. 

And this is a symbolic place where we can have conversations with those who have come before us and who we miss, and those that we haven’t met yet. We’ve invited the community to come out one by one to plant plants; some of the people are planting in memory of someone who’s passed from COVID-19 complications.

 

ASIA HAMILTON

COMMUNITY MEMBER

I’m here today to plant some flowers in memory of my mother. I thought this would be a great way to honor her.

In this garden, every plant is meaningful.

 

SAMANTHA PICKERING

COMMUNITY MEMBER

I personally lost my dad to COVID. That’s what brings me here is to do something in memory of him. 

 

VENITA THOMPKINS

COMMUNITY MEMBER

It’s an opportunity for those passing by to be able to reflect, or just being able to find a healing space, because you may not have had an opportunity to release.

 

Doug has created

dozens of installations in neighborhoods, schools,

and hospitals 

across the state

 

JONES

Most of my projects are about bringing diverse groups of people together to participate in the actual process of creating artwork. Very often, public art is made by people who are disconnected from the communities that they serve. It really needs to be a conversation that includes the community. The last 20 years of my career have definitely been inspired by classes that I took at the University of Michigan. For example, in urban redevelopment, we talked about, “If you’re not going back home after graduation, why not?” Which led me back home. 

 

Doug’s projects have involved

hundreds of people

and have been experienced 

by thousands

 

JONES 

One thing that I hope that my social practice inspires in the communities that I serve: it’s an idea that we can work together. 

 

THOMPKINS 

We’re definitely happy that Douglas Jones is here, sprinkling love and vision in the Virginia Park community. 

Video Produced by Jarrett Begick, Michigan Media All photos by Eric Bronson, Michigan Photography
By Sydney Hawkins, Michigan News

Asia Hamilton showed up on a misty fall day to Detroit’s historic Virginia Park district to plant three flowers: one for her mother, one for her father, and another for her sister.

Asia Hamilton smiling and leaning against a wooden post while wearing gardening gloves

Asia Hamilton planted flowers for her mother, father and sister at the Ancestor Posterity Butterfly Garden in the historic Virginia Park area of Detroit. She said the garden “offers peace, beauty and unity.”

“Having a loved one lost to COVID-19 pneumonia, we’re definitely happy that Douglas Jones and Mr. Whitaker are here sharing and participating and sprinkling their love and vision in the Virginia Park community.”

~ Venita Thompkins, active resident in Virginia Park

Venita Thompkins dusts her hands off after planting a flower in honor of her brother

Venita Thompkins said that every memorial garden needs a soldier in it, so she planted a purple coneflower in honor of her brother, Irvin Thompkins, a Vietnam veteran who died from COVID-19 in May 2021.

She was one of dozens of people that stopped by that day to ceremoniously plant blooms one-by-one, each in honor of loved ones who had passed away—most from COVID-19. Many were unable to have funerals during the pandemic.

It’s no surprise so many gathered. An early “hot spot” in the pandemic, the city of Detroit data indicate that more than 2,800 Detroiters have died of COVID-19 to date with more than 7,000 deaths likely related to the virus.

“Losing my mom last year was really shocking, especially to COVID,” said Hamilton. “And since then, I’ve really gotten into gardening. A garden is a place that offers peace, beauty and unity, and I thought it would be an amazing way to honor her and other family members I’ve lost.”

“Every garden needs a soldier in it; this is for Irvin Thompkins,” said Venita Thompkins, referencing her brother, a Vietnam veteran who died from COVID-19 in May 2021, as she knelt down to plant a purple coneflower.

Samantha Pickering found out about the garden over the summer and had been looking forward to participating.

“I lost my dad to COVID April 1, 2020, so I came here to do something in memory of him. Having to grieve through isolation, we never had a funeral or memorial service, so I’m grateful for this opportunity.”

Samantha Pickering in the garden, looking off into the distance while wearing a Batman shirt and a Detroit "D" hat

Samantha Pickering lost her father to COVID in April 2020 and the family wasn’t able to have a funeral or memorial service, so was grateful for the opportunity to have a way to honor him in the garden.

They all had responded to a call for community members to contribute to the planting of the “Ancestor Posterity Butterfly Garden,” located just outside the Joseph Walker Williams Center off of Rosa Parks Boulevard. The three-year-long project is the brainchild of University of Michigan alumnus Douglas Jones, a Detroit-based artist, activist and community organizer, and his co-collaborator and fellow artist Errin Whitaker.

Doug Jones standing and smiling in the garden

University of Michigan alumnus Douglas Jones is a Detroit-based artist who co-developed the Ancestor Posterity Butterfly Garden just outside the Joseph Walker Williams Center off of Rosa Parks Boulevard.

Just before the stay-at-home orders were issued in March 2020, the project was commissioned and greenlit by the city of Detroit and Design Core Detroit. Though the plan was always to design a garden in the historic neighborhood, the pandemic and its devastating impact on the people of Detroit gave it more meaning as plans stopped and stalled but continued to move forward.

“It feels so great to be out here today, to see this come to life,” said Jones, who greeted each person stepping onto the plot with a cheery hello and a socially distanced elbow bump.

Jones, who has facilitated public art projects in several locations across Michigan including Detroit, Jackson, Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti and Grand Rapids, says the garden is an example of the brand of “public art” that he believes in.

Errin Whitaker kneels down behind the ancestor chair he created for the garden. It is decoupaged with people's portraits.

Errin Whitaker, a Detroit artist who collaborated with Jones to create the butterfly garden, created the ancestor posterity chair that is positioned in the middle of the garden.

“Through my work as an artist, I’m trying to shift the narrative of public art,” he said. “Most of it is consumptive, but I’ve always thought of it as something that requires participation and collaboration from the community, from the people that will enjoy it most.”

Led by Jones and Whitaker, there were several people who helped bring the project to fruition, including Kyle Bartell, co-founder of Sit On It Detroit, who crafted the wooden benches that surround the garden and Akello Karamoko, a farmer at Keep Growing Detroit who grew the starter seeds for the native Michigan plants that make up the butterfly garden.

While Jones designed the garden, Whitaker created the “ancestor posterity chair” that is positioned in the middle of the plot, where it will eventually be enveloped in plants as the garden matures in the coming years. According to the artists, the chair was inspired by Wole Soyinka, a Nigerian playwright first introduced to Jones while taking undergrad classes at U-M, and his idea of a symbolic chair created for our ancestors, both past and future.

Kyle Bartell sitting on a wooden bench he created for the garden

Kyle Bartell, co-founder of Sit on it Detroit, crafted the wooden benches that surround the garden.

“My biggest influence with the chair was my grandmother. She had three daughters and three grandsons and she never thought we got enough rest as Black men,” Whitaker said. “I made the chair in quarantine, where I was able to sit still and rest. I thought about her a lot while making it, and I thought about all of the people, ancestors, that are continuing to transition during this time.”

Akello Karamoko arranging trays of seedlings in the garden

Akello Karamoko, a farmer at Keep Growing Detroit, grew the starter seeds for the native Michigan plants that make up the butterfly garden.

Jones and Whitaker are currently working to create potential community programming related to the garden, and to create a plan with the community to continue its upkeep.

A sign in the garden next to a string border. The sign is handwritten and says, "Thank you. Please don't step inside of the string. Garden planting in progress."

Sign at the Ancestor Posterity Butterfly Garden in Detroit.

“We didn’t realize how powerful the idea would be pre-pandemic when we started planning the project,” Jones said. “It’s full of symbolism—hope, unity, renewal—and I know it will be cared for and nurtured by all of the people who showed up today to grieve and reflect. This is the kind of art that I want to do.”

A brown colored sign at the entrance of the garden that says "12th Street Memorial. July 21, 1967. We Remember." Followed by a list of names.

Just outside the garden, a historic sign memorializes those who died during the events of the summer of 1967.

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