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(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Boat orchid
(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston

Boat orchid

native habitat
Datetender perennial
MediumOrchid
DimensionsHeight (up to): 121.9 cm (48 in.)
ClassificationsPlants
Credit LineIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Accession numberHRT5
eMuseum ID795656
TMS Source ID29199
Last Updated1/15/25
Status
Not on view
Web Commentary
Cymbidium spp.

The name Cymbidium comes from “cymba,” the Latin word for boat, which refers to the shape of the flower’s lip. These are modern hybrids of several species from the foothills of the Himalayan mountains. During the summer, Museum horticulturists move them outside to grow in warm days and cooler nights, mimicking their natural habitat.

Isabella and her gardeners were admired for their orchids. In 1907, the society pages of the Boston Sunday Post observed, “Every single day new orchids come in to be placed about the inner court, the corridors and various rooms for above all does Mrs. ‘Jack’ love orchids.” 

BibliographyNotes
Jenny Pore, "The Orchid Habit: Under the Spell of the Cymbidium," Inside the Collection (blog), Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 24 January 2023, https://www.gardnermuseum.org/blog/orchid-habit-under-spell-cymbidium

(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
tender perennial
(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
tender perennial
(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
tender perennial
(c) 2024 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
tender perennial
(c) 2018 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
late 19th century
(c) 2023 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
19th century
(c) 2023 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
19th century
(c) 2018 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Francis Edward James
1892
(c) 2014 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
James McNeill Whistler
1879-1880