Floating Gardens

Floating Garden Mobiles are stands of beeswax coated paper petals, seed pods, Native Magnolia leaves, feathers, and mirrors that suspend from a triangle of weathered branches.

 

Wilderness Act 50th Anniversary

On September 21, 2014,  Woodlands Garden, an urban preserve and sanctuary, welcomed several hundred visitors in celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the Wilderness Act. The Act, signed into law by President Lyndon Baines Johnson in 1964, served to legally define “wilderness” and protect over 9 million acres of federal land.

Today, over 109 million acres of federally owned land and forests are protected as a result of the Act. The Wilderness Act defines as “areas where the earth and its communities of life are left unchanged by people, where the primary forces of nature are in control, and where people themselves are visitors who do not remain.”

The Wilderness Act Performance Series, (WAPS), was created and produced by composer and naturalist, Stephen Wood. The series included 23 visual artists, composers and poets who collaborated with green spaces in the Atlanta area to increase exposure and engagement of the Wilderness Act’s impact on natural and cultural preservation. As part of the WAPS, artists studied with naturalists, arborists, wildlife experts and historians during the field seminars. Each field seminar focused on different aspects of the venues unique ecosystem, it’s human history, and it’s involvement with community.

My installation included 3 Floating Gardens  that hung from various trees as talismans, protectors of the forest. They lived outside for the first time and endured severe storms with only minor weathering. Floating Gardens are for sale and available by commission.