Black Turtle Beans
Phaseolus vulgaris
I’m fascinated by heirloom vegetables and have several varieties in my small backyard garden. I plant them every year specifically because I desire to admire and draw them. I find joy and a sense of magic in getting to know my garden plants’ personalities and habits, watching as they burst from the soil, grow, bloom, and then mature.
There are only a handful of different bean varieties for sale in grocery stores (including black turtle beans), but there are thousands of heirlooms grown around the world, many of them with remarkable patterns and colors. Believed to have originated in the Americas, black turtle beans have been a staple in Southern and Northern American diets for over 7,000 years.
The challenging part of capturing black turtle beans is that when they are ready to harvest, the plant is barely clinging to life – the stems slowly become a dusty, faded green and the leaves are in various stages of life, ranging from leaves that are still managing with green bits here and there, to pale yellow ones, to crumpled brown, dry brittle things that have given up. But those cream-coloured bean pods… well, I saw an opportunity there. I was eager to capture the reflected light and shadows I could see playing together, creating such elegant soft purples, blues, pale oranges, and rich sepia freckles… the beans were glowing. I was enamored and luckily, I was able to work from those beans over the course of many weeks, long after the green on their stems had completely faded away. When I composted those little stems later, I felt a pang of regret having to let go of a subject that I’d spent so many hours admiring.
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Read more about this artist’s work: 25th Annual