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Born to a Family of Sharecroppers, This Topiary Artist Overcame Discrimination to Become the 'Picasso of Plants'

Smithsonian Magazine·Michele Debczak·about 2 months ago
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Self-taught artist Pearl Fryar, who died this month at age 86, got his start when he tried to win an award from his local garden club. He ended up becoming a celebrity in the horticultural world Pearl Fryar in his topiary garden Jonathan Newton / The Washington Post / Getty Images For proof that topiary can be high art, look no further than the work of Pearl Fryar. The self-taught artist used shrubs and trees as his medium, and he was known as the “Picasso of Plants” during his decades-long career. Fryar died in his home in Bishopville, South Carolina, on April 4 at age 86, leaving behind a legacy in the world of ornamental gardening and acres of living art. Born to a family of sharecroppers in North Carolina in 1939, Fryar lived a full life before getting into topiary, as Penelope Green reports for the New York Times . He served in Korea as a chemical weapons specialist for the U.S. Army, then worked in can manufacturing in New York.…

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