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Showing posts from April, 2023

Creative Inspiration

Looking back through my photos from our site visit to Saltaire in January 2023, I was struck by how many I have of the allotments site, and I remember the pull towards old domestic objects that had been used by the plot holders. I decided against using a growing medium for this project, but will revisit it for future work using slower-growing plants and still with ethical considerations. I'm now going with the pull towards using old, unwanted objects that can be re-purposed.  This sits well with many elements of the project for me: my own dislike of waste and unnecessary expense, a keen interest in how objects can be reused long after their expected use is over, the ethical and sustainable bent we are expected to explore within this project, and a desire to explore how these ideas will connect with the atmosphere and history of Saltaire. I've previously come across artists who embroider/stitch onto old/domestic/industrial/unexpected objects, creating unusual talking points.  Th

Investigating the Language of Habitat

  As a lover of reading and writing, I had to dig deeper into the definition and meaning of 'habitat'. What does the dictionary say?   How do we interpret the word itself and similar or opposite words? What does it feel like? Dictionaries and scientific sources are in broad agreement about a basic definition: Merriam Webster says "the place or environment where a plant or animal naturally or normally grows", and National Geographic states "a habitat is a place where an organism makes its home.  A habitat meets all the environmental conditions an organism needs to survive." A straw poll amongst friends and work colleagues gave similar answers. We tend to think of habitat in quite narrow terms - where a plant or animal grows or lives - but we can think more widely than this if we understand the root of the word.  We understand that habitats can be sustaining or inimical to life and organisms, and that the behaviour of organisms, even beneficial ones, changes t

Growing Upwards

  Following the last post, I monitored my cress word to see how/if it grew, and how it changed during the week or so. As it was only on damp kitchen roll, it had a tendency to dry out quickly, so needed checking more frequently than if I'd grown in soil or compost. Day 8 By day 10, the cress was growing well (and I was remembering to water it!).  It grew unevenly, whether because of its position on my dining table, uneven spread of seeds, or quality of seeds, I'm not sure.   Day 10 Day 10 I usually grow cress in tub or plant pots, in some kind of soil medium, so growing on kitchen roll on a glass tray felt wrong in some way, like I was depriving the seeds of their 'normal' habitat or nutrients. Maybe this is how people or animals feel, when they're transplanted or have to make do with 'less' than they need?  Interesting idea to think about - I'm all for trying new growing ideas, but realise that plants/people/other organisms need much more than basic wat