Northern California Women's Caucus for Art

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                              "Patterns" ArtTag Online Exhibition

                              "Censorship" ArtTag Online Exhibition 

                              Picture

                              Pescadero Land Art: Sunday, September 11, 2011

                              On September 11, we made land art on Irma Velasquez's 40-acre coastal property. The land is mostly south facing and has open rolling hills, a glimpse of the Pacific ocean and a few areas of coastal scrub. The night before,  Judy Johnson-Williams camped in her van on a hillock and was awakened by Alejandro, the coyote, who asked her who she was and why she was sleeping on his turf. Participating in this project were Elise Cheval, Kim Criswell, Ginger Slonaker, Belinda Chlouber, Judy Johnson-Williams, Priscilla Otani, Pantea and Hamid Karimi, Judy Shintani, and Irma Velasquez. We spent most of the day creating individual pieces, then walked the land to see what we had made. 

                              Artists Statements
                              Elise Cheval
                              Full Circle. This land art installation was created with flour, sieves of various sizes, an old garden hose and bucket. With red tail hawks, vultures and ravens hovering in the warm wind  currents above, I imagined I was an aboriginal artist in the  beginnings of time as I printed patterns of lace, connecting me to my own Belgian and Cherokee roots, and the flour from whence it came on the ground in Pescadero.

                              Judy Johnson-Williams
                              Earth Beads. I wanted to honor the land literally so I used dirt, adobe, really,  mixed with natural straw and sun dried.  I used the ample gopher tailings and mixed it with water in a bucket and then kneaded it until it wasn't
                              sticky and could be shaped into flat medallions or other bead shapes. There wasn't enough time for them to fully dry but they were hard enough so that people could take one home as a moment.  Some of them I'm going to attempt to pit-fire to see if I can turn them into real ceramic, tho, admittedly low-fire.

                              Pantea Karimi
                              Vegetable Garden. 2011, 7x7 feet, plastic materials and chopsticks. I created Vegetable Garden piece to comment on our manipulated environments caused by man-made additions, and altered natural landscapes due to excessive waste and over consuming unnatural materials.

                              Priscilla Otani
                              Wind Traveler. Sacs created from calligraphy paper, filled with seeds, pods, snail shells, dried weeds, pebbles. Each strung with stick and waxed linen thread. The pods make a dry, husky sound when the wind blows through them. Their shapes are reminiscent of breast icons strung by women in Tono. The frail membranes will release their contents on the ground and into the air as the Elements dictate.  Inscribed on each is Basho's haiku, the last he wrote before his death:

                              Tabi ni yande                     Falling sick on a journey
                              Yume wa kareno o             My dreams circle round and around 
                              Kakemeguru                      In withered fields

                              Judy Shintani & Kim Criswell
                              Flower Power. We worked in collaboration with the land inside a pit-like indentation at the top of a hill that people were calling “the volcano”. Taking our cue from existing vegetation at the bottom of the “volcano”, we created a land flower reminiscent of Flower Power stickers that were popular during the 1960s peace movement. At the center of the pit, dark patches of spent poppy plants grew in a pattern that suggested large petals. We emphasized that image by removing clumps of straw-like wild oat and outlining dark petals with white shale rock. We used violet-colored powdered tempera and sweet yellow dandelions to emphasize the center. We intuitively incorporated the healing qualities of these different elements: later research confirmed dandelions’, poppies’, shale's, and the color purple's medicinal usage for stress, liver, transformation, and balancing. We finished the piece with a small performance, inviting those who wished to join to us at the rim of the “volcano” to cast handfuls of flour into the wind, symbolically releasing whatever we wanted to let go of.

                              Irma Velasquez
                              Horse. I used the canvass that spoke to me on the side of a hill. I worked from the image that emerged as I moved the vines that were intertwined between the drying stalks of poison hemlock. I used the hay that was on the hill to build on the image of a horse looking toward the open field. The wind gave the sculpture  movement and the light from the setting sun gave it definition from afar.

                              About Land  Art
                              Land Art, Earth Art, Eco-Art; whatever you
                              want to call it, this art form came out of the 60's and 70's ecology movement.
                              It utilizes natural materials and landscape, and often, the actual works cannot
                              be displayed or sold through museums. Early works were site-specific and could
                              not be moved or removed without lots of heavy earth-moving equipment. Think Robert Smithson's 'Spiral
                              Jetty' or Nancy Holt's 'Sun Tunnels.'

                              Sometime later, artists such as Ana Mendieta, Agnes Denes and Maya Lin evolved less intrusive
                              styles of land art. Other artists are even less intrusive. Examples are Richard Long (who tramps a
                              path) and Andy Goldsworthy who mostly
                              uses his own strength, teeth and hands to rearrange natural materials found
                              on-site. Goldsworthy relishes the temporary nature of his creations and often
                              documents their decay.

                              Simple Rules
                              We used a few simple guidelines:
                              1.  The sculpture must be temporary and the creation of it must do no harm to the land, flora and fauna.
                              2. If using plants, don't denude or kill them (unless they are invasive weeds)
                              3. If moving dirt, digging or stacking, be aware of wildlife which may be disturbed.
                              4. Use all degradable materials (e.g. jute rope to hold things together) or remove non-degradables after documentation. 

                              May, 2011 "A Sense of Place" Opening Reception

                              Setting Up "A Sense of Place"

                              Absence/Presence Online Exhibition

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