Harvest the Wind - Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden
Transcription
Harvest the Wind - Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden
Harvest the Wind Creating Beauty out of Chaos Harvest the Wind • Fairchild Art Exhibit – Sponsored by City National Bank • Leonard & Jane Abess, Garden benefactors • 20 local artists – Selected from 80+ submissions • Given honorarium by City National • Choice of tropical hardwood planks – From fallen trees in Arboretum – Milled with WoodMizer sawmill • Mandate: Take a year to create beauty out of devastation – Harvest for us this ill, dark wind Harvest the Wind Stephen Althouse • LYSILOMA LATISILIQUUM • Wild Tamarind – Lysiloma latisiliquum • White Pine & Paint – Pinus strobus • 58”h x 27”w x 18”d • Braille inscription – Pulvis et umbra sum • I am dust and shadow – Vanitas, vanitatum, onia vanitas • Vanity of vanities, all is vanity M. Kate Borcherding AFTER ANDREW, PALM SCENES No. 9 Les Cizek • A BRIEF HISTORY • Australian Pine – Casuarina equisetifolia • Mahogany – Swietenia mahogani • • • • Brass Quartz clock movement 4’h x 2’w x 14”d “the 24-hour clock – a metaphor for the slow passage of time before the storm hit” Eliose Cook • OPEN HEART • West African Mahogany – Khaya senegalensis • Woman’s Tongue – Albizia lebbek • Graphics • Found objects • 58”h x 20”w x 1’d Maggie Davis • • • • • HURACAN DANCER Hand colored relief print Japanese paper 6’h x 2’w “Language of Hurricanes” – – – – Eye Path Circulation Tracking Dan Dawes • RESURGENCE • West African Mahogany – Khaya senegalensis • Oil paint • 5’h x 2’w • “I wanted to enliven the fragment of a destroyed tree with the image of growth and regeneration” Reva Freedman • SNAKE CHARMER • Lancewood – Nectandra coriacea • • • • Palm parts Fiber Found objects 4’h x 3’w Beau Gillespie • BENCH • Jamaica Dogwood – Piscidia piscipula • Royal Palm – Roystonea regia • West Indian Mahogany – Swietenia mahogani • 3’h x 5’w x 2’d Casimer T. Grabowski • MEDIEVAL POISON CUP • Logwood – Haematoxylon campechianum • Silver; Amethyst • 8”h x 3”w • “This tropical wood has been a source of the prized dye … for centuries. The freely soluble brownish dye was mordanted with ammonium alum, which converted the wood to a rich purple.” James Herring • UNTITLED • West Indian Mahogany – Swietenia mahogani • 25”h x 14”w • Here I step outside my usual medium of clay. I tried to maintain a similar respect for the material, by letting the process speak. As for the image, … I asked a question and this was the response.” Jewell • WIND • Podo – Podocarpus sp. • Silk Oak – Grevillea robusta • Natural materials • 4 ½ ‘h x 4’w William Noel Koch • WIND-BLOWN • West African Mahogany – Khaya senegalensis • Haitian Yokewood – Catalpa longissima • Laurel Negro – Cordia allidora • 34”h x 34”w x 18”d Barry Massin • LITTLE THRONE • Black Palm – Normanbya normanbyi • 17”h x 10”d • Why a throne? The hurricane was overwhelming. I needed to sit down.” Rhonda Maria Morton (Untitled) Nancy Richter (OPPOSITION) Karen A. Rifas • UNTITLED • West African Mahogany – Khaya senegalensis • Brazil Beauty Leaf – Calophyllum calaba • Handmade paper • 75”h x 52”w x 12”d Neil Smith • STORM SURGE • Wild Tamarind – Lysiloma latisiliquum • Cuban Belly Palm – spines • 9”d x 8”h Frank Verrili • SUN TOTEM #4 – Study for 18-foot Totem • Indian Elm – Tectona grandis • Teak base – With carving waste • 6’h x 7”w x 4”d Stacy West • BURGEONING • Texas Ebony – Pithecellobium flexicaule • Silver • 18”h x 12”w • “Symbolic of regrowth, … human hands work to bring order from chaos while nature replenishes her beauty.” Brenda Whittaker-Ramsey • A-FRAME • West African Mahogany – Khaya senegalensis • Concrete • 6’h x 3’w • Consisting of both natural and industrial materials which need each other to stand, the piece asks that we nurture a cooperation between these forces – perhaps an essential step toward complete recovery.”