Friday, June 21, 2013

Toolbox, Project Update 1.0

This is really just a brief snapshot of today's events :) Yesterday I poured two test molds of the "papercrete" mix, each using different recipes.

Mold #1 uses 65% wet paper pulp, 20% damp earth (with high clay content), and 10% Portland cement.
Mold #2 uses about 55% wet paper pulp, 20% damp earth (with a higher sand content), 15% Portland cement, and 10% dry sand.

Mold #1 has been drying for over 30 hours and is still not entirely dried. Hear's hoping it'll hurry up! Next time I think I'll drain the paper pulp a bit more try and to speed things up. I'll post some pictures of both of them soon, when they have cured a bit longer.

Today, I've been modeling, measuring, procuring, and cutting various plywoods and blocks for a scaled Toolbox mold.

Hooray for SketchUp! 

It's been a tedious process, but worth the time to get the right shape. Next up will be assembling the outer and inner molds, mixing up a large batch up papercrete, and pouring! Can't wait to upload some pics!

Cheers all :)
The Urban Food Revolution seems to be a somewhat isolated occurrence.  The same people visit community gardens and participate in farmers markets.  I would love to reach a more diverse audience.  The way that we feed cities must be taken into account in Albuquerque.  I see a growing change such as the East Central Ministries.  People in a city could elicit change by refusing to eat “empty” food.  The reality is that empty food is cheap and fast.  Why can’t real food be more affordable?    Through community involvement we could teach families how to make whole foods from scratch and to grow food in their own gardens. I hope that guerilla gardening can take more root.  There is endless open ground in Albuquerque that could be used for community gardening.  Maybe people in Albuquerque should take it upon themselves to plant in these areas.  The city of Albuquerque should try to fund a nonexpensive way to gather food and resources within city limits. I like the idea of small mobile units that move around Albuquerque bringing education and functional resources to an area. Nils Norman created a mobile library/greenhouse and the Geocruiser.  The Geocruiser was equipped with solar array, and a worm composter.  It reminds me of the mobile libraries which would go into neighborhoods giving out books where access to books was limited.



Nils Norman, Geocruiser, 2001


Nils Norman, The Gerard Winstanley Radical Gardening Space Reclamation Mobile Field Center and Weather Station Prototype (NYC Chapter), 1999


The issue of space is always something that I think about whether it is the audience to be reached or the site to be explored.  I feel that land art is a viable art form to express ideas and bring about change.  The natural world must be cultivated into our everyday lives.  I don’t understand how we separate nature from ourselves as something out there.  We are immersed in the natural world, it is all around us and part of us whether we see it or not.  We breathe, hopefully we drink water and we have the ability to feel the solid earth beneath us.  I guess as human beings we feel that nature is something outside us.  We can start to make little discreet changes in our lives by eating better, planting small gardens, and appreciating nature in unnatural spaces. I feel that the 10 Chronologies is an attempt to define what Environmental art is.  Art has the power to promote change.  Hopefully, art can bring about change in the way people consume food and talk about the Earth.
The thing about Environmental art which I find daunting is the lack of funding.  It is hard to sell an idea.  I can see how grant writing is very important for an artist trying to model farming and gardening.  Environmental art seem to be more of a collaboration.  The farm by the freeway helped to challenge the concepts of community art.  I like the idea behind this project to bring about change.  I feel this is another example of how a community can acquire a abandoned space in which to beautify the space, plant a community garden and get volunteers to teach and facilitate workshops. I like the way  Bonnie Ora Sherk's work  incorporates children into the project.  I think that children naturally want to feel part of a community. 


Bonnie Ora Sherk, Crossroads Community, 1974-1980


Sprouting update

Sprouting workshop with kids update! the sprouts are growing fast and beautifully! The kids are loving it and continue to wake up every morning anticipating the sprouts. They are intrigued and fascinated by the growth of these remarkable seeds, knowing they have been watering and watching them sprout. Here are the images! some of them are already edible. Alfalfa, Lentils, and Wheatgrass :)



By the Way...

Here's the blueprint I developed for my zine, just to give you guys a sneak peek into what it'll look like when it's done.  The final version, of course, will have images in all of the blank boxes, & it will include a half-dozen or so pages of instructional diagrams that people can use to identify a few of the most common edible & medicinal plants that can be found around the city.



 There it is!  I hope to have a rough draft with images ready to bring to class by Monday so you guys can give me some input.

A rockin' good time



Labyrinths have been used since the beginning of society to serve as representations of human connection with mythical and universal realms. More and more artists, farmers and landscape architects have been using designs similar to the labyrinths existing in ancient times to promote connectedness between humans and land. What I've decided to do for my final project in this course is to create my own rock formation on a piece of land in my neighborhood. It has been vacant for many years and often sought out for usage of a community space or garden development. However, all ventures to occupy this dirt lot end without victory. It makes me question many things; land rights, water rights, human rights and art. If there are no signs, why can't one stand there? If there are no deliberate instructions that art cannot exist on the vicinity, why can't one create it?

So, with some friends of mine, we ventured into the desert to borrow some rocks. We drove far and wide to gather a variety of shapes and sizes that will make our labyrinth stand out. Since it is not necessary a deliberate fact that we can place these on the vacant lot, we've decided to make the shape at night, under the protection of the stars and in the company of the biggest moon of the year. A little apprehensive about how it will all turn out, but nevertheless, excited to be doing something out of the ordinary. Stay tuned for video footage and pictures.


Making Stuff & Doing Things

 
As you guys know, I've spent the past couple weeks working on developing a mini graphic novel in the form of a zine.  The zine is mainly about urban foraging, but I'm hoping it'll also raise some questions about place, culture, & identity, & maybe get people thinking about the weird & sometimes wonderful experience of being a human in a big city.   It has been an exciting challenge, since I'm trying to tackle some big themes in a tiny platform, & also since I've never done anything like this before.  For inspiration & guidance about how to make the zine format work, I revisited one of my favorite books from my teen years: Making Stuff & Doing Things, a collection of DIY zines assembled by a guy named Kyle Bravo.
 
The book is a crazy extensive foray into all things DIY.  In it, you can learn how to make clothes, books, paintbrushes, rope, rugs, beer, wine, jewelry, toothpaste, soymilk, glue, candles, birth control, pet food, solar ovens, composting toilets, & giant puppets, as well as how to do magic tricks, play the guitar, build a lean-to, silk screen, wheat paste, turn old vinyls into flowerpots, do home repairs, make electronic music, fix your bicycle, car, or harmonica, & much, much more.  Some of these have very detailed, clear instructions or recipes you can follow start-to-finish, while others just give a couple tips & then point you in the direction of books you can check out from the library.   How many of these guides will be useful to you depends on how committed to DIY you are, &/or how homeless you are. (A guide to deodorizing socks without ever washing them? I'm cool, thanks).  

I thought you guys would be particularly interested, since a big chunk of the book is devoted to practical alternatives to participating in the industrialized corporate food system.  The Outdoor Survival, Food & Drink, & Health & Body sections are packed with super helpful tips about foraging (urban & otherwise), sprouting, natural remedies, & more.  There's also a small section on gardening, which has some useful info about composting, companion crops, & extending the life of your raised beds.
  
In keeping with the book's anti-consumerist, DIY ethos, it's also available for free online. You can download the PDF here:



If you are at all interested in making stuff &/or doing things, I suggest you check it out. There's something for in here for everyone.  Even people who want to make their own butt plugs.