Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Assignment 3 Project Plans - Olivia Masih


  1. Rainbow Springs Fauna Postcards
    My idea here is to create a collectible set of postcards. Each postcard would depict a different animal that is part of the Rainbow Springs food web that I began researching in Assignment 1. The front of the card would have my own drawings of the animal as well as its common name. I would also design the stamps on the back. There would be a few different kinds of stamps, each designating what other animals the given one interacts within the food web. The back could also include a fact about the animal. The goal of the postcards is to create a collectible set that is theoretically easy to obtain because of the low price; people would be likely to buy a lot of them which would create more outreach. This is a draft of what the general structure of the postcard would be (it would be fully colored). 


  1. Rainbow Springs "Tree of Life" Food Web
    This plan would be a hand-drawn depiction of the food web/ecosystem connections in Rainbow Springs. I was inspired by Lombardi's research-based drawings and their ability to visually show connections that are otherwise unknown or hard to perceive. They wouldn't be as sparse as Lombardi's; I am thinking that I could add illustrations that show the different ecological connections. 

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Art and Fermentation-Jenna Sutela

Here is a video I found interesting mainly because it encompasses three of my favorite things: art, microbiology, and food. The body is an ecosystem in itself, and it's important to maintain a healthy balance of microorganisms in the gut.
Over the past few months, I've been making my own yogurt, kimchi, kombucha, and some cheeses; I've recently wanted to start making my own sourdough since yeast has been apparently flying off the shelves recently. These processes, I believe, are sustainable and a great way to pass the time. I look forward to looking into this and maybe come up with an idea for project 3 that relates to this topic.


Jenna Sutela, still from Nam-Gut (the microbial breakdown of language), 2017. Courtesy of the artist.
Jenna Sutela, still from Nam-Gut (the microbial breakdown of language), 2017. Courtesy of the artist.
Short article: https://www.bannerrepeater.org/nam-gut-by-jenna-sutela
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-art-worlds-strangest-new-trend-fermentation
Video: https://vimeo.com/225088034

THIS DESIGN MUSEUM URGES YOU TO TAKE DISPLAYS HOME WITH YOU


By Elizabeth Segran

The Swedish Design Museum To Go Is Like Talk Out for Art

Handcrafted plates crafted from wood derived from Swedish forests so you can have a picnic beside the water. A simple lamp to read a book under the moonlight. A brilliant inflatable helmet in case you decide to take a bike ride. These are among the objects that designers Johan and Nina Kauppi have packed in a backpack for you to take on your next visit to Sweden. “We’ve selected products that are great examples of Swedish design, but that we think will also enhance a visitor’s experience of our country,” Nina Kauppi explains...

For more click here

JAE RHIM LEE MUSHROOM DEATH SUIT


Jae Rhim Lee video here more info here

Here's a powerful provocation from artist Jae Rhim Lee. Can we commit our bodies to a cleaner, greener Earth, even after death? Naturally -- using a special burial suit seeded with pollution-gobbling mushrooms. Yes, this just might be the strangest TEDTalk you'll ever see. TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes, Pattie Maes on the "Sixth Sense" wearable tech, and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts.

KELLY COBB: 100 MILE SUIT


Wired article here Tree Hugger article here Blog here

If the world were fair, Malcolm Gladwell would get a quarter every time someone used the phrase Tipping Point and Alisa Smith and James MacKinnon would get one as well when anyone used the Hundred Mile Something. Today we present the 100 Mile Suit, a project by designer Kelly Cobb to make a man's suit from materials produced within 100 miles of her home in Philadelphia. It took 20 artisans several months to produce and Ralph Lauren it's not.
"It was a huge undertaking, assembled on half a shoestring," Cobb said at the suit's unveiling one recent afternoon at Philadelphia's Institute of Contemporary Art. "Every piece of the suit took three to five pairs of hands to make," Cobb added. "Every garment you wear took three to five pairs of hands to make too, but you don't know whose hands or where."
Local sheep, local spinners, knitted underwear, local brain-tanned buckskin leather for the shoes, the outfit is 92% local. "If we worked on it for a year and a half," Cobb says, "I think we could have eliminated that 8 percent." ::100 Mile Suit via ::Wired

Saturday, March 28, 2020

MISSION OF THE MERMAIDS BY SUSAN ROCKEFELLER


MISSION OF THE MERMAIDS BY SUSAN ROCKEFELLER here 

Since I was a small child I have admired and loved the ocean; its mystery, ability to soothe and immense power. Mission of Mermaids explores the harsh realities of ocean acidification, overfishing and pollution through the eyes of the mythical and dreamlike mermaid. The film honors those who live from and for the seas and encourages us whether fisherman, activist or beach dreamer to protect our precious waters. It is my most personal film to date and reflects the love and respect that I have for our seas.

INSECT GARDEN BUTTERFLY PARADISE


Insect Garden Butterfly Paradise here 

82 year old Willem bought an remote potato farmfield back in 1980 and transformed it into a butterfly paradise. For almost 40 years he works the land with shovel and scythe in order to preserve the butterflies. Willem's paradise has become one of the most important habitats in the region for these fluttering beauties. 
But Willem has a problem. Due to an overload of nitrogen in the air, Willem’s flower rich butterfly paradise gets slowly driven away by a monoculture of grass. Butterflies that used to be common just a few decades ago are rare these days, or have completely disappeared.

CHASING GHOSTS BY GRIZZLY CREEK FILMS


Chasing Ghosts video here

In their quest to identify the pollinator of the ghost orchid for the first time, this team of conservation photographers and scientists spent three summers standing waist-deep in alligator- and snake-laden water, swatting air blackened by mosquitoes, and climbing to sometimes nausea-inducing heights. They came away with an even deeper love for Florida's wildest wetlands—and with surprising discoveries that may help to conserve both the endangered orchid and its shrinking home. "Chasing Ghosts" was produced for bioGraphic by Grizzly Creek Films (grizzlycreekfilms.com). Read our related story, "Ghosts of the Everglades," and discover more beautiful and surprising stories about nature and sustainability at www.biographic.com.

DETROIT HIVES



Detroit Hives by Spruce Tone Films here 

Detroit Hives follows Tim Paule and Nicole Lindsey, a young couple from East Detroit, who are working hard to bring diversity to the field of beekeeping and create opportunities for young Detroit natives to overcome adversity. It is estimated that Detroit has with well over 90,000 empty housing lots to date. In an effort to address this issue, Tim and Nicole have been purchasing vacant lots and converting them into bee farms. Detroit Hives explores the importance of bringing diversity to beekeeping and rebuilding inner-city communities one hive at a time.

50 YEARS OF FARMING FOR LOVE AND VEGETABLES BY ADITI DESAI


50 YEARS OF FARMING FOR LOVE AND VEGETABLES here
Learn about the women behind Potomac Vegetable Farms (PVF) and how they produce and market their locally grown vegetables in the DC/Maryland/Virginia region.

THE CAPITAL BUZZ BY LAURA WILSON


View Capital Buzz video here

This short documentary film was produced by the 2011 George Washington University Institute for Documentary Film. It played in the Best of D.C. Shorts 2012, the Atlanta Film Festival, the D.C. Environmental Film Festival, the Southwest Arts Film Festival, and the Colorado Environmental Film Festival.

ADD ONE BACK BY SAM SHELINE


ADD ONE BACK BY SAM SHELINE video here

Add One Back tells my story about adding aquaculture oysters to a previously totally vegetarian diet.

AR WALLACE THE OTHER GUY TO DISCOVER NATURAL SELECTION


AR WALLACE THE OTHER GUY TO DISCOVER NATURAL SELECTION here

This paper-puppet animation celebrates the life of Alfred Russel Wallace, who is co-credited with Charles Darwin for the theory of natural selection. Read the story here: http://nyti.ms/1fhBbGw













COLLAPSING TIME: ZOE KELLAR


See Collapsing Time: Zoe Kellar here

Zoe Keller is a graphite artist creating large-scale, highly detailed drawings. using the traditions of scientific illustration, she weaves complex visual narratives about at-risk species and wild places. Collapsing Time takes a look at the motivations behind her work. zoekeller.com/

Seeds The Diversity of Wonder

The Seed Artist video here
The Seed Pioneers video here
Let Seed Be Thy Medicine here
A Day Without Seeds here
The Seed Bank here
The Seeds of Andhra Pradesh here

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Here are two Apps that could help you discover more nature

1.) iNaturalist (Free) - Helps identify plants and animals by taking a picture.

2.)  Falling Fruit- (a few $)- Give a map of any requested area, lists plants that are available for free foraging, so in my neighborhood we have lots of Loquats- so if I can go on and add a Loquat tree or visit an already existing post and shows me where to find the Loquats.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

TOMAS SARACENO: ARACHNOMANCY CARDS


See Tomas Sarceno's Arachnomancy cards here

GABRIEL OROZCO ASTERISMS


Gabriel Orozco Asterisms video here

MARK DION DRAWINGS


Mark Dion drawings here

MARY MATTINGLY: WATERPOD


Mary Mattingly Waterpod here and here

Douglas Kelley interviews Mary Mattingly on her futuristic floating community, the Waterpod. "The Waterpod demonstrates future pathways for nomadic, mobile shelters and water-based communities, docked and roaming. It embodies self-sufficiency and resourcefulness, learning and curiosity, human expression and creative exploration. It intends to prepare, inform, and provide an alternative to current and future living spaces. In preparation for our coming world with an increase in population, a decrease in usable land, and a greater flux in environmental conditions, people will need to rely closely on immediate communities and look for alternative living models; the Waterpod is about cooperation, collaboration, augmentation, and metamorphosis. As a malleable and autonomous space, the Waterpod is built on a model comprised of multiple collaborations. The Waterpod functions as a singular unit with the possibility to expand into ever-evolving water communities; an archipelagos that has the ability to mutate with the tides. The Waterpod is mobile and nomadic, and as an application for the future it can historicize the notion of the permanent structure, simultaneously serving as composition, transportation, island, and residence. Based on movement, the Waterpod structure is adaptable, flexible, self-sufficient, and relocatable, responsive to its immediate and shifting environment. As with art, architecture is largely about stories: stories of its inhabitants, its community, its makers and their reflections on the past or expectations of the future. The Waterpod is an extension of body, of home, and of community, its only permanence being change, flow, and multiplicity. It connects river to visitor, global to local, nature to city, and historic to futuristic ecologies. With this project, we hope to encourage innovation as we visualize the future fifty to one hundred years from now." -Mary Mattingly

Athanasius Kircher's Arca Noƫ


Links to images of Kircher's analysis of the design of Noah's Arc here and here


GENE POOL

Gene Pool article here and video here

NICK CAVE


More about Nick Cave and his Sound Suits here

FLMNH HERBARIUM DATABASE



FLMNH Herbarium database here

MARK LOMBARDI DRAWINGS


Read Newsweek article here, watch video here, see examples of work here

JOSEPH CORNELL


Joseph Cornell video here

Although he rarely ventured far from New York, Joseph Cornell was able to create intricate worlds of his own from the solitude of his basement. In this episode of Anatomy of an Artwork, discover Cornell’s enchanting Soap Bubble Set, a perfect example of the artist’s miniaturized realms constructed from everyday ephemera. With symmetrically laid out clay pipes, glasses, maps and organic detritus, Cornell built a vast referential network of found items that encapsulated his many interests from across the arts & sciences.

More here and here

EVA KOTAKOVA


Eva Kotakova Collage/Installation video here

I'd also like to share my Time-Lapse of plant growth that I made for my thesis exhibition. In order to allow the viewers to observe t...