Thursday, February 4, 2010
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Monday, January 25, 2010
More photos
Special thanks to our morning volunteers, and to team members Seth Hoffman and Fidelma Hawney for their tireless efforts.
Thanks for making the Somerville Topiary Farm a reality!
Friday, January 22, 2010
This Saturday
In Union Square we'll be installing the trees! Please come by between 1:30 and 4:30 pm. All the trees are spoken for, but the public is welcome to come and observe the event! The more, the merrier!
Thursday, January 21, 2010
ArtsUnion Winter Sculptures
There will be a public opening for the ArtsUnion winter sculptures on Saturday, February 6th at 4:30 pm in Union Square (snow date: Feb 7 at the same time).
A press release from the Somerville Arts Council about the topiary farm and the other sculptures that are part of the ArtsUnion program:
ArtsUnion Winter Sculpture Series 2010
Exhibit Opening: Saturday, February 6th at 4:30 p.m.
90 Union Square
Five artists, who work in the fields of architecture, ceramics and sculpture, have created site-specific installations for Union Square's urban landscape. The unifying theme of this work is recycling and growth. Look for sprouting mushrooms, recycled topiary Christmas trees and a plant emerging from the back of a solitary human figure. Collectively, we hope these installations will encourage passersby to consider Union as a dynamic, green-friendly urban landscape. The work will remain up for winter and early spring. The five installations:
This event is part of the ArtsUnion winter sculpture series coordinated by the Somerville Arts Council. ArtsUnion aims to spur the cultural economic development of Union Square, Somerville. Generous funding for the ArtsUnion is provided by the Massachusetts Cultural Council’s John and Abigail Adams Program and the City of Somerville. ArtsUnion has numerous partners, such as ArtSomerville, SCAT, Union Square Main Streets, and the Somerville Historic Preservation Commission. For more info go to: www.somervilleartscouncil.org
Recycled House
Chong-Zi Chen's has created the frame of a small house using stainless steel. In a participatory project (date to be announced), Chen invites the public to fill this house frame with recycled materials. The result will be Recycled House, an urban dwelling built with materials like plastic bags and bottles. The purpose of this design is to bring awareness of recycled and sustainable material of housing construction to the community of Somerville.
Somerville Topiary Farm
Meera Deean and Elizabeth Stoel present Somerville Topiary Farm, a participatory project that takes the most obvious detritus of Christmas-the multitude of dead Christmas trees-and gives it new life.
On January 23, the public will be invited to install used Christmas trees in gridded plots, where they will use fabric to wrap and shape the trees into topiary-like forms. Individual participation will give rise to the large-scale public spectacle of the Topiary Farm-a tree farm of whimsical shapes made entirely out of repurposed trees that transforms not only the trees, but also the space of the square itself. To learn more about this project, visit this amazing blog: topiary farm blog
The Caterpillar's Garden
Marisa Dipaola's sculptures suggest children's storybooks coming to life. For this exhibit, she has created The Caterpillar's Garden, a grouping of brilliantly glowing mushrooms, evoking the caterpillar's habitat from Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. The mushrooms are oversized so people can experience the garden from a caterpillar's perspective. The exhibit is made using foraged plastic bags lit up with L.E.D. lights, in an effort to clean up this world-and illuminate the wonders of the natural world.
Ripplerun
Bevan Weissman's piece, Ripplerun, a tree of stainless steel and cement, is a functional sculpture meant to provide an alternative awning from rain and nasty weather. Its clear plastic leaves protect, while also allowing Union Square dwellers a unique interaction with precipitation.
Still Growing
Wen Xiong Lin's piece, Still Growing, is a ceramic vessel-a solitary human figure-that serves as a tree planter. A young plant will emerge from the figure's back, suggesting nature's dependence on mankind for survival. Still Growing is one in a series of Wen Xiong Lin's installations, consisting of a hand-built ceramic sculpture, a living plant and soil from Somerville, where the artist currently resides. Sunshine, rain, seasonal changes and even visitors are integral parts of this work. It is a growing, living public installation, and residents are encouraged to care for the plant. The figure has undistinguished facial expressions and, along with the plant and the soil, they are just typical. The figure could be anyone, the soil and the plant from anywhere.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Old trees make new art
A new article in the Somerville Journal. Thanks to Meghann Ackerman!
Saturday, January 16, 2010
The Afterlife of Christmas Trees
Ever wonder what happens to Christmas trees collected off sidewalks? (Aside from the occasion topiary farm project, that is.) Somerville and Cambridge mulch the trees. Somerville residents can pick up mulch from the Department of Public Works. Cambridge recycled more than 4700 trees last year for mulch, which was used in city landscape projects and parks. Medford trees are composted. And some municipalities--not any locally--are starting to use the mulched trees for biomass-fueled power plants.
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Somerville News
Our first bit of press in the Somerville News. Thanks to Julia Fairclough for helping to get the word out about the project.
Tree Collection
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Fabric / wrapped precedents
Man Ray's The Enigma of Isidore Ducasse, 1920
Christo and Jeanne Claude's Wrapped Reichstag, 1995
Claes Oldenburg's Soft Drainpipe-Blue (cool) Version, 1967