17. Fidelia Bridges, Bird's Nest in Cattails
- Rainey Knudson
- 2 hours ago
- 2 min read

Fidelia Bridges was 15 years old when she suddenly lost both her parents in 1850. Her ship-captain father had died three months prior in Portuguese Macau (present-day China). In an awful coincidence, the news of his death arrived a few hours after his wife also died at home, never knowing that her husband had preceded her in death. Bridges and her siblings became destitute orphans within a matter of hours.
In the abrupt collapse of every structure that had explained her world, Fidelia found her way through her devastation with drawing. She located the guide wire of close attention to nature and followed it for the rest of her life. Hers were no grand landscapes, no vistas of river valleys, but narrowly observed studies of birds, flowers, and even weeds and poison ivy. It was almost an existential practice, observing life continuing to live, painting small natural truths that were indifferent to human catastrophe.
Here, like Dürer before her, she unlocked the complexity and unlikely beauty in a clump of grasses. Her cattails bound messily together by a bird’s nest are elegant in their asymmetry, the detail breathtaking. She painted it like an Old Master portrait, spare against a plain background. And though there is no bird in this picture, the nest itself is a promise of new life.
Fidelia made her living as a nanny, and later by selling her work and illustrating books and greeting cards. A gardener and conservationist, she was attentive to nature to the end.
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This post is part of The American 250, a series featuring 250 objects made by Americans, located in America, in honor of the country's 250th anniversary. 250 words on 250 works, from January 1 to December 31, 2026.
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