Osage Orange
Maclura pomifera
If buffalo gourd, the plant in my other painting, is relatively unknown to my friends and neighbors, the same could not be said of the Osage orange. When I posted an image of this painting on Facebook, it seemed everyone had a story to tell about it from childhood. The fruit of the Osage orange, apparently, makes a particularly effective weapon for children bent on mischief: large, sticky, hard as a rock, and capable of breaking windows or leaving a mess on sidewalks and driveways when squished. They are also fun to roll down hills.
Those same friends also had multiple folk names for it: horse apple, bois d’arc, bodark, hedge-apple, bow-wood, yellowwood, and mock orange. There are probably more. Its Latin name is Maclura pomifera, but almost nobody knows it by this. It is perhaps a measure of affection to have so many different common names. To name something is to give it a place in your understanding of the world.
Osage orange (or, as I know it, the bodark tree) is originally native to Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas, though it has been naturalized throughout the United States. I don’t have childhood memories of the bodark tree, perhaps because I grew up in the deserts of New Mexico. My first recollection of this tree was from a trip to Rockport, Texas, a small town on the Gulf Coast. I saw my first opossum and caught a sheepshead fish on that trip, too, and as a consequence, the coastal region of Texas was forever imprinted in this desert girl’s mind as a mysterious landscape, filled with weird, unsettling life forms.
So when early one fall the fruit of the tree appeared at my feet on my walks to and from my house to the university where I work, I was surprised. I knew exactly what it was, of course, since it looks so unusual—like chartreuse brain matter—but here? So far from the coast?
I looked it up when I got home, where I learned that far from being confined to the coast, it is very widespread. It is also known as much for its wood as for its odd-looking fruit. Legend has it that Native Americans used it to make their bows (hence bois-d’arc, or “bow wood”). Other legends about the wood abound, including one I heard one day at a neighborhood Christmas party (which also says something about people’s affection for the tree, given that we were sitting around talking about it at a party) about ranchers using the wood for fencing, only to have new trees sprout from the planted posts.
I like painting complicated things, and the surface of the fruit, with its jigsaw-puzzle nooks and crannies very much appealed to me. So the next day I picked up one of those odd fruits littering the ground and took it home with me, and that grew into the painting you see here. Which, if you think about it, is not unlike a fence post growing into a tree.
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