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  • Bio and Artist Statement of Jane Ingram Allen
  • Living Quilt for Nestucca Valley, installed on August 12, 2021, Summer Youth Art Program Project, Sitka Center for Art & Ecology, Otis, Oregon
  • Resume of Jane Ingram Allen

Jane Ingram Allen Art Projects

~ Recent Art Projects by Jane Ingram Allen in Hand Papermaking and Environmental Art

Jane Ingram Allen Art Projects

Tag Archives: handmade paper

Jane Ingram Allen’s handmade paper mixed-media works on exhibit in Sebastopol, CA, at The Passdoor

08 Tuesday May 2018

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birds, Botanicals, cormorants, handmade paper, mixed media, northern California, Sebastopol, The Passdoor

I am happy to announce that my handmade paper artworks are now being exhibited at The Passdoor, https://www.thepassdoor.net in Sebastopol, California. Sebastopol is just west of Santa Rosa, CA, and the gallery is in The Barlow, a center of shops, wineries and restaurants.
During the summer months, the gallery is featuring artworks related to nature, and I have 3 of my works from the “Site Botanicals” series on display along with 2 works featuring bird imagery with handmade paper. The “Site Botanicals” are mixed media on handmade paper created from the plant depicted on the scroll-like 2-sided suspended artworks. The “bird” pieces are suspended handmade paper and collected natural materials that depict birds (cormorants) seen at Sonoma coast beaches.  Here are some photos of the works on display at The Passdoor.

Hope you get a chance to go by and see my handmade paper artworks this summer. at The Passdoor in Sebastopol.  I will be back in Santa Rosa on May 15 after one month in Taiwan for the Cheng Long Wetlands International Environmental Art Project. I will also be teaching some more hand papermaking and art workshops in my Santa Rosa studio during June and July. For more information email me at info@janeingramallen.com

 

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Living Quilt is Starting to Bloom!

19 Thursday Oct 2017

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bed, blooming, flower bed, Georgia, handmade paper, living quilt, Newnan, Newnan Art Rez, quilt, wildflowers

“Living Quilt” has a bud on October 16, 2017

Jane Ingram Allen’s “Living Quilt for Newnan” is starting to bloom. This photo was sent yesterday by Newnan Art Rez board member Bette Hickman showing a wildflower plant with a small bud. It is exciting to see the growth of the quilt, and hopefully some blooms will be happening soon. This installation was installed on August 31 in Newnan, Georgia, at a park near the intersection of College and Temple Avenues in downtown Newnan, next to the Children’s Museum that is at the site of the historic Male Academy in Newnan.

Jane created this art installation during her August 2017 residency at Newnan Art Rez (www.newnanartist.org). The quilt is made with handmade paper dyed with non-toxic dye and has seeds for wildflowers in the pulp to grow and bloom in the same “house” pattern. The handmade paper dissolves as mulch, and over time the flowers will continue to grow and bloom as a living quilt for the flower bed. The headboard and footboard was created by the artist with local branches and vines. Here is a photo of the quilt on the day it was installed.

the Living Quilt for Newnan on August 31, 2017

Keep watching here for more photos as the quilt begins to bloom.

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Jane’s “Living Quilt” – the Saga Continues

22 Friday Sep 2017

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bed, earth art, eco-art, environmental art, flower bed, handmade paper, nature, quilt, wildflowers

My “Living Quilt” installation in Newnan, Georgia, continues to change, and more plants are appearing. These photos taken by Newnan artist Bette Hickman show the latest transformation of the handmade paper quilt with wildflower seeds in the paper pulp. The work was installed on August 31 at the end of my artist-in-residency at Newnan Art Rez (www.newnanartist.org)
I will continue to post photos here sent in by local residents. Hopefully the wildflowers will bloom in a few months before frost. The “bed” with a headboard and footboard made with local branches and vines will last for many years.

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Photos from the Dec. 3-4 Papermaking Workshop at Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation

06 Tuesday Dec 2016

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California native plants, handmade paper, Laguna de Santa Rosa, Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation, native plants, papermaking, papermaking workshop, Santa Rosa

These are photos of the Papermaking with Plants of the Laguna Workshop I taught this past weekend at the Laguna de Santa Rosa Heron Hall in Santa Rosa, CA. The participants enjoyed two fantastic December days of sunshine and papermaking using local plants.

 everyone-gathered-for-show-and-tell-img_8133 gatheirng-willow-img_7799 gathering-carex-close-up-img_7771 gathering-carex-img_7767 gathering-dogbane-close-up-img_7761 gathering-dogbane-img_7747 group-looking-at-plants-palm-trees-img_7786 hand-beating-of-cooked-and-washed-pulp-from-eucalyptus-img_7826 hand-beating-the-pulp-with-wooden-hammers-img_7975 handmade-paper-drying-on-line-inside-heron-hall-img_8115 handmade-paper-on-sunflower-cake-pan-mould-img_8180 handmade-paper-with-embossed-string-lines-img_7977 heron-hall-as-papermaking-studio-img_8090 jane-demonstrates-dispersing-the-pulp-by-rocking-in-asian-way-img_7893 jane-demos-sheet-forming-with-sample-mould-img_7898 jane-putting-formation-aid-in-vat-img_7879 looking-at-handmade-paper-drying-on-line-img_8085 looking-at-handmade-paper-drying-outside-img_7921 looking-at-handmade-paper-with-light-coming-through-img_8124 looking-at-paper-with-palm-bark-in-it-img_8144 looking-at-textured-piece-of-wood-to-use-for-drying-paper-for-embossment-img_7972 looking-at-the-drying-sheet-of-handmade-paper-img_8030 making-paper-samples-with-elderberry-and-willow-in-cooking-pots-img_8108 papermakers-working-at-vat-img_7922 papermakers-worksing-img_7917 peeling-willow-bark-close-up-img_7813 phyllis-makes-a-sheet-of-paper-img_8056 showing-paper-with-photo-and-thread-in-it-img_8141 showing-some-handmade-paper-with-leaves-in-it-img_8159 taking-handmade-paper-off-kitchenware-mould-img_8095 taking-off-dogbane-bark-img_7819 tanya-making-paper-sample-sheet-img_7907 tanyas-paper-with-cheesecloth-img_8174 view-of-2-paper-makers-img_8004 view-of-paper-vats-and-making-paper-img_8050 view-of-room-with-many-sheets-of-paper-drying-on-lines-img_8016

These photos were taken by my husband Timothy S. Allen (http://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com) and show some of the activities during the two days. We gathered plants, cooked them, beat them to a pulp and then formed many sheets of handmade paper to discover what great paper we could make from the different plants of the Laguna de Santa Rosa area around Heron Hall.  It was a great workshop, and thanks to the Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation and all the very creative participants!

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Papermaking with Local Plants Workshop in Santa Rosa, California

03 Thursday Nov 2016

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California, environment, handmade paper, Laguna de Santa Rosa, native plants, northern California, paper, paper art, Santa Rosa

I will be teaching a special 2-day papermaking art workshop in Santa Rosa, California, on Dec. 3 & 4 at Laguna de Santa Rosa.   Here’s the information about the workshop and really looking forward to using some northern California native plant waste materials to make Asian-style handmade paper.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Papermaking with Plants of the Laguna de Santa Rosa


Two-day workshop with Jane Ingram Allen


Saturday and Sunday, December 3 and 4, 9:30am-4:00pm each day

Location: Heron Hall, Laguna Environmental Center, 900 Sanford Road, Santa Rosa, CA 95401

$150. Pre-registration required  – Click here to register:

(http://www.lagunadesantarosa.org/laguna_walks_classes.shtml).  

Suitable for adults and teens 15 years old and up.  This workshop is suitable for all experience levels, from novice to experienced papermakers.

Description:  Participants will learn to make handmade paper from Laguna de Santa Rosa plants and create unique handmade paper artworks using all natural materials from the Laguna. During a walk around the native plant garden, we will identify plants suitable for papermaking and gather dried leaves and bark from trimmed branches or fallen twigs and also invasive plants that can be used for papermaking. The process will include preparing plants, cooking, beating and sheet forming with Asian and Western papermaking techniques. The emphasis will be on creative problem solving and use of waste materials to make handmade paper with sustainable methods that do not harm the environment. The handmade papers can be used for drawing, painting, printmaking and collage as well as for creating greeting cards — just in time for the holidays! Each participant will also make a sample book with papermaking recipes for the plants used in the workshop. The instructor will introduce unique hand papermaking techniques that she has developed from her experiences as an artist in residence in Japan, Taiwan, Tanzania, Indonesia, Nepal, Brazil, Thailand, China, England and the Philippines, as well as at art centers and nature parks in the United States.

Jane Ingram Allen is originally from Alabama and lived in Taiwan from 2004-2012, and in Santa Rosa since August 2012. She is an environmental artist who creates sculpture installations and community public art projects using handmade paper made from local plants and other natural materials. She is also an independent curator and arts writer and has taught art courses at colleges and universities as well as papermaking classes all over the world. Jane has received awards to do artist in residency projects in the USA, Taiwan, the Philippines, Japan, Nepal, Brazil, China, Bali, Indonesia, and Turkey, and she exhibits her art around the world and teaches workshops and creates site-specific public art installations. For more information, visit Jane’s website at www.janeingramallen.com and her blog at https://janeingramallen.wordpress.com.

 

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Revisiting my Artwork “Falling Water” installed at Gaslight Brasserie, Boston, MA

23 Friday Sep 2016

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Boston, Boston Sculptors Gallery, handmade paper, installation art,, kuandu museum of fine arts, Taipei, water

img_2216-2

During my visit to Boston this year for my residency at Boston Harbor Islands National Park, I had a chance to go by and see my artwork “Falling Water” installed at Gaslight Brasserie, 560 Harrison Avenue, Boston, MA (http://www.gaslight560.com). This restaurant is open for dinner 5-11PM every day and brunch on Saturdays and Sundays 11AM – 3 PM. Café Green Light, also in the same building is open for lunch only . My artwork is installed on one of the really tall walls inside where the Café’ Green Light is located, but you can also be see my artwork from the dinner dining area of the Gaslight restaurant.

“Falling Water” was created in 2007-08 during my artist in residency at Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts, Taipei, Taiwan, and exhibited in my solo exhibition “Water Works” at Boston Sculptors Gallery, 486 Harrison Avenue, Boston, in July 2009. The artwork was purchased by the restaurant and building owners from that show for installation at the Gaslight restaurant space. It was wonderful to see what a great job they did moving the artwork from the Boston Sculptors Gallery where it was suspended from the ceiling to create this great wall installation at Gaslight. We also had a chance to take a photo of the installation, posted here. Thanks to my husband Timothy S. Allen for taking the photo(http://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com).

“Falling Water” was also exhibited in New York City at Tenri Gallery and at Mass Audubon Visual Arts Center, Canton, MA.

falling-water-2008-side-view  falling-water-at-mass-audubon-2008

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Going to Turkey – Fulbright grant art project

23 Friday Oct 2015

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artist-in-residency, Fulbright grant, handmade paper, installation, Izmir, Jane Ingram Allen, papermaking, timothy s. allen, Turkey

I am happy to announce that I have received a Fulbright Specialist Grant for an art project in Turkey at Ege University, Museum of Paper and Book Arts, Izmir, Turkey.
I will be flying to Turkey on November 18, 2015 and return to San Francisco on December 16, 2015. For the first week I will be in Istanbul touring some of the sites and seeing art museums and galleries on my own, and then going to Izmir on November 25 for the start of my Fulbright grant project.

Here is a photo showing the outside of the Museum of Paper & Book Arts at Ege University, Izmir, Turkey, and a group of visiting students.

paper & book arts museum Izmir

During the 20-day Fulbright Specialist grant in Izmir, I will be exploring the plants around Izmir to use for my papermaking art and creating some new artworks using local materials and inspired by the place. I will also teach papermaking workshops at the Ege Univerisity Musuem of Paper and Book Arts and consult with the Museum and the university about curriculum in paper arts and environmental art.  I will also help them to set up a papermaking studio or workshop at the Museum.  I will also have an exhibition of my handmade paper artworks at EgeArt 2015, an international art festival held in Izmir from Dec. 11-13, 2015.  My exhibition will include some of the handmade paper “site maps” I have created in other residencies around the world, including during my 2004 and 2005 Fulbright grant projects in Taiwan and a 2010 artist in residency project in Bali, Indonesia.  Here are some photos of a Taiwan Site Map and a Bali Site Map.

Taiwan site map floral abundance Bali site map front 1

I know the Paper & Book Arts Museum in Turkey through my international art project “One World Many Papers” that was a collaborative paper artwork I created with artists from around the world.  I asked the participating artists to send me a sheet of paper they made to represent their country and then I joined all the sheets of paper together to make a large map of the world having no political borders.  The finished piece was donated to the Paper & Book Arts Museum in Turkey at Ege Univeristy, Izmir, in 2011, shortly after the museum opened.  Before getting its permanent home in Turkey, this artwork was seen in exhibitions around the world in 2009 and 2010.  Here is a photo of the finished artwork.  For more information about my “One World – Many papers Project” please visit my other Blog: http://www.janeingramallenart.blogspot.com

world-side-small map-side-email artistside-email

I will be posting on this WordPress Blog more about the work I do in Izmir.  Please check back later in November for photos of the places I see and the artwork I make during this art project in Turkey. My husband Timothy S. Allen is going with me to Turkey, and he will be taking lots of photos to document my work and also photos of our experiences in Turkey. His Blog is at http://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com

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More about Jane Ingram Allen’s Artist in Residency at Fire Island National Seashore

21 Monday Sep 2015

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artist-in-residency, Fire Island National Seashore, handmade paper, papermaking, plants for papermaking

During my two-week artist in residency at Fire Island National Seashore from Sept. 5 to Sept. 19, 2015, I lived and worked at Watch Hill near the Watch Hill Ferry Station in Staff House #8. My husband Timothy S. Allen was able to join me for the residency, and Tim took many photographs of my process and the work I did at Fire Island. This was my first time to visit Fire Island, and I was inspired by the beauty of the place and its unique ecology. What impressed me most is that it is a natural area and a wilderness yet so close to New York City. This is one of most heavily populated regions in the world, yet Fire Island National Seashore offers a great nature experience with no cars, no restaurants, few stores and not so many people. It has an abundance of wildlife including many different plants…also many mosquitoes and deer ticks and lots of poison ivy that make gathering plant materials challenging!

Jane picking sea grass

At Watch Hill there are usually only a few campers and boaters and day trippers who come over on the ferry from Patchogue during the weekends. My residency on Fire Island started on Saturday of Labor Day weekend, and it was very crowded and bustling with many boats, campers, and those who came for the holiday to enjoy the beautiful beach and the great sunny weather. After Labor Day things definitely were different and much quieter. There is ferry service to Fire Island Watch Hill Station on weekends until October, and the snack shop and store is open also on weekends. We brought all of our food and personal needs with us on the ferry when we came over from Patchogue, Long Island. I also had to bring everything I would need to do my artwork in the suitcase with me from California.

jane making paper at Fire Island

 

Fortunately I have an artist friend, Marcia Widenor, who lives in Sea Cliff on Long Island, and she helped me get together the things I would need for the residency. She let us borrow some sheets and towels and also buckets, plastic bins and stainless steel cooking pots. I brought all the other necessary items for hand papermaking in my suitcase. I am used to setting up a papermaking studio with minimal equipment and supplies and using what I find on site. I did bring in my suitcase a blender and a wooden hammer and some powdered formation aid, a few moulds and deckles, felts and non-woven interfacing as well as some miscellaneous art materials.

Cooking sea grass

 

My plan for Fire Island was to make handmade paper for my artwork from the local plant waste materials, harvesting leaves and bark in a sustainable way so as not to harm any living plants. I used four plants that I collected and prepared on Fire Island. The vegetation for papermaking at Watch Hill is very limited, and I could find no trees that I could get the bark from to make paper.  I did find many long leafed beach and marsh plants and was able to use the leaf plant fibers. The most abundant plant is Phragmites australis, or common reed, that is considered invasive.   For my handmade paper, I used Phragmites, beach grass, Iris leaves and eel grass (seaweed). In this book I have outlined the recipes for making paper from each of these plants and included a sample of the handmade paper for that plant.

Jane making Phragmites paper samples.

 

For one artwork I made on Fire Island I decided to try sand casting with handmade paper, placing sheets of the wet handmade paper created with local plants on the sand to dry. The beach at Fire Island National Seashore has beautiful almost white sand. I was also influenced by reading about the effects of Hurricane Sandy on Fire Island and how the shape of the island is constantly changing with shifting sands and changing ocean conditions.   For the sand cast handmade paper, I made the sand wet and sculpted it to form dunes and added bits of the local plants in the sand. Then I placed my handmade paper on the shaped sand to dry. When the paper was dry I removed the handmade paper and dusted off the loose sand. Then I reshaped the sand for the next piece. Each sand casting was about 18 inches long and 12 inches high. For creating a Fire Island Site Map, I joined the pieces in a long curving shape with natural thread and used acrylic matte gel as glue. The total piece is about 18 feet long and 12 inches high and has a variable thickness from 1 inch to 4 inches. I plan to suspend this work from the ceiling near a long wall for an installation. It can also curve around a corner or hang out in space. It folds up at the thread for easy transport and storage, so I am able to bring it with me for later exhibitions.

_MG_32382_MG_32393_MG_32404_MG_32425_MG_32447_MG_32461Jane working on site mapsand dunes 2 piecessite map detail

 

The many birds I encountered on the beach at Fire Island National Seashore inspired another artwork I created during the residency. I learned that the piping plover, an endangered species, nests near Watch Hill. I made a stencil in the shape of the piping plover with buttercut material on one of the small moulds I brought. I saw many plovers on the beach at Watch Hill, and one day a small flock of piping plovers came swooping in to feed near the water line as I was walking along the beach. These small birds really do make “piping” noises. I created two suspended “piping plover” artworks (one piece has 15 plovers in the flock and the other has 9 plovers). The handmade paper plover shapes are joined together with natural threads and I used Phragmites plumes, feathers collected on the beach and some seaweed (eel grass) to add details in the handmade paper birds. These artworks will hang in front of windows or from the ceiling with light coming through the thin Asian-style handmade paper.

 

Jane peeling birds off

Jane standing in front of hanging birds plovers pano

 

I also created other pieces of handmade paper from local plants during the time at Fire Island, and I plan to continue working with them when I am back at my home in Santa Rosa, California. This residency was a great experience for me, and I enjoyed very much the time to experiment and work with new and different plant fibers. It was also a great chance to be inspired by a beautiful national park area and a wilderness so close to New York City.  I would like to thank the Fire Island National Seashore staff for all of their help, especially Interpretive Specialist/Park Ranger Kristin Santos and coordinator of the Fire Island National Seashore Artist-in-Residency program, Dawn Lee.

_MG_40571

The photos of the plants and of my process were taken by my husband Timothy S. Allen. You can see more photos of my previous residencies and other artworks at my website:  http://www.janeingramallen.com

Tim’s photo blog at http://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com also has other photos from our time at Fire Island National Seashore.

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“Healing the Earth” installation 2 months later

09 Monday Jun 2014

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handmade paper, installation, Nan Hua University, Prayer Flags

Prayer Flags at Nan Hua University “Healing the Earth” Installation Surviving Well After Three Months

prayer flags may1prayer flags ma-clossyprayer flags may-1These photographs show how the 250 handmade paper prayer flags created for my “Healing the Earth” installation are surviving after 2 months. When I returned to Nan Hua University to make a presentation for the school’s International Biodiversity Day celebration on May 23, I had a chance to visit the installation again and see how the artwork was changing over time. The students told me that the weather has been very rainy and windy during the months since the artwork was installed on March 22.   It is amazing to see how well the handmade paper has survived. The colors have faded somewhat and some flags have fallen to the ground and been dissolved into compost, but most are still “hanging in there”. The students and I made the paper pulp for the flags from paper mulberry bark and dyed the pulp with liquid fiber reactive dye. The handmade paper sheets were formed on A-4 size Western-style moulds and done in the Asian or Japanese way with multiple dips and using formation aid in the vat. This seems to produce very strong paper that lasts well through wind and heavy rainstorms.

You can see earlier entries on this Blog when the prayer flags installation was first put up and also see photos of the process of creating “Healing the Earth”. day 12_flags right side-small_1723 copy copy

I hope the students at Nan Hua University will send some more photos in a few months to show how the installation continues to change over time.

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Artist in Residency Project at Nan Hua University, Chiayi County, Taiwan: March 16-29, 2014

31 Monday Mar 2014

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Architecture and Landscape Design Department, artist-in-residency, Chaiyi County, handmade paper, Jane Ingram Allen, Nan Hua University, Studio, Taiwan


Image

This photo shows me looking over the outdoor studio space on the first day of my residency at Nan Hua University.  This is where I will set up a hand papermaking studio and work with the students in Architecture and Landscape Design to make a collaborative multi-part installation of handmade paper using all natural and bio-degradable materials.

The idea for this art installation came after visiting the campus and talking about the environmental problems in the area, and we decided to try to make an art installation that would symbolically help to heal the land that had been damaged when the university was first built and a road was cut into the hillside destroying the beautiful curve of a ridge.

Image After studying the site, I thought of using colorful handmade paper prayer flags suspended from the trees on either side of this cut.  This is my first sketch of the art installation, showing that the artwork could be made in many unique parts and involve the students to teach them about papermaking and introduce the idea of creating art with natural, biodegradable materials that could be good for the environment and go back to nature after lasting for a while.Image

This photo shows a handmade paper prayer flag in red being made by a student at Nan Hua University.

ImageHere you can see several students making handmade paper prayer flags for the installation.  Image

In this photo you can see a student helping to color the paper pulp with yellow non-toxic fiber reactive dye.  ImageThis photos shows a group of students posing with me in fron of the lines of handmade paper prayers flags they created drying in the sun.  We used 4 local plant waste materials to make some of the paper for the prayer flags, and also bought some prepared pulp from the paper factory in Puli (Nantou County) Taiwan to use for the prayer flags. We dyed the paper pulp with liquid fiber reactive dye that is non-toxic and does not harm the earth.Image

This photo shows me beating some local sugar cane plant fibers to make pulp for some of the prayer flags at Nan Hua University.

 

During the two-week residency, we made almost 300 handmade paper prayer flags in the traditional 5 colors. Blue means the sky, white means the clouds, red means fire, green means water and yellow means earth. With these five colors in their proper order, the prayer flags will help bring the world into balance. We put images of the “wind horse” on some of the prayer flags.  ImageHere a student is holding up the handmade paper with the wind horse image that he just made.  This image is often found on Tibetan prayer flags to carry the prayers with speed and strength to all the earth.  We also used images of the pineapple on some of the prayer flags because in Chinese culture the pineapple is a symbol for success and prosperity. We put many other good symbols and words in English and Chinese on the prayer flags and did some drawing and painting on the handmade paper prayer flags.  The tradition of hanging prayer flags is common in Tibet, and they are usually hung from high mountain passes to bring blessings and good luck to the people and all creatures.  I have also seen colorful prayer flags hanging at temples in Nepal, shrines in Japan and in other countries.  It is a great tradition and way of sending prayers or wishes in any language or culture.

 

The first part of the project “healing of the earth” was done on Tuesday of the first week I was there, and we consulted with a famous Feng Shui Master in Dalin who told us to connect the two sides of the ridge with threads in the 5 colors and to leave the threads across the road on the ground covered by some earth so that cars could still go across.  We also planted a young tree (a special Chinese banyan tree) on each side and tied the five colors of thread to the roots of the tree that was planted on each side of the road.  This symbolic joining back together of the broken land with the threads will start to heal this earth. 5 color thread joining finished

 

The second part of the healing will be my art installation made with the students consisting of 250 colorful prayer flags suspended on natural ropes from tall trees growing on each side of the road. There are 10 ropes each about 30 meters (100+ feet) , 5 on each side, with 25 prayer flags on each rope.Jane with long line of prayer flags We hope this art installation will help to complete the healing and bring good fortune and good luck to all the people and creatures of Nan Hua University.  The art installation will stay in place until it biodegrades and can go back to nature without harming the earth because all the materials are natural and biodegradable. Maybe it will last for several weeks or months; nature controls its destiny. I enjoyed very much the opportunity to work at Nan Hua University and create this art installation with the students and hope that it will help to “heal” a small part of earth on this campus and that it will inspire the students to take better care of our environment and to use natural materials and good environmental practices to make their art.   Really today the earth in all parts of the world needs healing, and all people should think more about what we do to harm the environment with our art and with our actions.

View of break in earth This photo shows the site for the art installation.  My next post will feature photos showing the finished installation of 250 handmade paper prayer flags.

 

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