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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: seeds for wildflowers

Living Quilts Blooming in Spring 2021

22 Thursday Apr 2021

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

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handmade paper, haus zur glocke, Lake Constance, quilt, seeds for wildflowers, Steckborn, Switzerland, wildflowers

It is great to see the resilient power of nature and how my Living Quilt Art Installations continue to change over time and keep on producing blooming wildflowers each season. The “living quilts” are handmade paper quilts each with a unique design, and the handmade paper pulp has seeds for wildflowers in the same colors and pattern as the “quilt”. Over time the handmade paper dissolves into mulch, and the seeds sprout and grow into a living, blooming flower bed.

Living Quilt for Steckborn was just installed in Steckborn, Switzerland, on April 17, 2021, and you can see more about that in the post previous to this one. I will post new photos of the “peaks and valleys” handmade paper quilt with seeds for wildflowers in the pulp as they are sent to me by the staff at Haus zur Glocke in Switzerland. People there in Steckborn, Switzerland, are also writing wishes for a better 2021, and they will be collected and posted online too. Thanks to Haus zur Glocke and curator Judit Villiger for making this installation possible even during a pandemic year. I was able to see the installation via a FaceTime call on April 17!

Living Quilt for Steckborn being installed on April 17, 2021. Photo by Christoph Ullmann.

Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth was installed at Sojourner Truth Park, Sacramento, CA, on Nov. 25, 2020, and it is blooming well this spring. This art installation was a part of the City of Sacramento’s 2020 artist in residency project. This photo shows many wildflowers blooming there on April 18, 2021.

Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth on April 18, 2021. Photo by Timothy S. Allen

“Guns Into Flowers” a living quilt art installation was installed on March 17, 2019. This artwork was created during an artist in residency project in Sacramento working with students at Natomas Charter School and installed at South Natomas Community Center Park, Sacramento, CA. This photo shows the art installation blooming in its 3rd year.

Guns Into Flowers on April 17, 2021. Photo by Timothy S. Allen.

Living Quilt for Santa Rosa was installed at Rincon Ridge Park in Santa Rosa, CA, on Nov. 21, 2018. This “living quilt” is now blooming for its 4th year. This project was supported by a grant from the City of Santa Rosa, and it was a response to the terrible wildfires in Santa Rosa in October 2017. It is great to see the resiliency of nature and the wildflowers continuing to bring new life to this area of Santa Rosa. This photo shows Living Quilt for Santa Rosa on April 9, 2021.

Living Quilt for Santa Rosa on April 9, 2021. Photo by Timothy S. Allen.

Happy Earth Day 2021.

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Sacramento “Guns Into Flowers” public artwork continues to grow and more seeds are sprouting

10 Friday May 2019

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

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California, gun violence, guns, handmade paper, natomas charter school, public art installation, quilt, sacramento, seeds for wildflowers, south natomas community center

It is great to see these photos of my public artwork “Guns into Flowers” that is sited at South Natomas Community Center Park, Sacramento, California. This project was done in cooperation with Natomas Charter School Academy of Performing and Fine Arts, during a 3 -week artist-in-residency during February and March.  It was installed on March 16, 2019. The seeds in the handmade paper quilt are for wildflowers in the same colors and pattern, and the handmade paper quilt has a gun motif to transform those “guns” into flowers in a few more months. One of the students that I worked with at the school is continuing to take photos of the artwork as it changes over time. It is great to have the photos to continue documenting this piece, and I will continue to post them as I receive them.  These photos were received on May 1, 2019, and I am sure they will be sending more photos soon.   There has been only a little rain in Sacramento, and the people there have also been watering the quilt to help the seeds germinate and the seedings grow.  Thanks to everyone for all the help.

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Thinking of Earth Day and the Beauty of Spring

23 Tuesday Apr 2019

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

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CA, California wildflowers, Earth Day, Earth Day 1995, guns into flowers, handmade paper, living earth, natomas charter school, Rincon Ridge Park, Santa Rosa, seeds for wildflowers, south natomas community center, SUNY Morrisville

Happy Earth Day everyone!  I was thinking today of the first art project I made with seeds in the paper pulp to sprout and grow over time. That was an art installation titled “Living Earth” created for the 25th anniversary of Earth Day in 1995 made with my art students at SUNY Morrisville on the campus in Morrisville, NY.  A handmade paper global map with seeds for wildflowers in the pulp changed over time into a living blooming earth. This artwork was focused on bringing more awareness to the problem of global warming and showed the continents of the Western Hemisphere and how they were projected to change from global warming. This is an even more acute problem today as global warming and climate change are becoming evident to all of us, and our coastlines are already changing.  Here are some pre-digital photos of my “Living Earth” installation in 1995.

My recent public art installation in Santa Rosa, California, also uses handmade paper pulp with seeds for wildflowers in the pulp to change, grow and bloom over time. This artwork called “Living Quilt for Santa Rosa” continues to grow and bloom with more flowers appearing every day. The artwork was installed on Nov. 25, 2018, and the first blooms began appearing in mid March 2019.

The “Living Quilt for Santa Rosa” art installation was part of the city of Santa Rosa public art program that awarded grants to artists to create public art in response to the devastating wildfires of October 2017. My installation is in the Fountaingrove area at Rincon Ridge Park near the children’s play area, and it consists of a “bed” made with soil and a headboard and footboard for the bed woven of local trimmed branches. The handmade paper quilt for the bed was created with seeds for wildflowers in the pulp in the same colors and pattern. I used the traditional “Flying Geese” quilt pattern and the colors of blue, white and yellow gold. The seeds in the pulp are for California golden poppies, Tidy Tips, Baby Blue Eyes, Wild Lupine, Globe Gilia, Baby’s Breath, Sweet Alyssum and White Linen Poppies. The flowers will continue to bloom over the summer, and the installation will biodegrade over time.

Hope you can go to see “Living Quilt for Santa Rosa” if you are near Santa Rosa, California. Rincon Ridge Park is off Fountaingrove Parkway at Rincon Ridge Drive and open to the public. Here are some photos of the Santa Rosa artwork taken on April 20 and 21, 2019, showing many flowers in full bloom, and the handmade paper quilt has all disappeared into the earth as mulch.  Seeing all those wildflowers in bloom reminds us that the Earth is a living thing of great beauty.

I also have another installation with handmade paper and seeds for wildflowers in the pulp that is in Sacramento, California, at South Natomas Community Center Park.  The Sacramento public art project is about the issue of gun violence and called “Guns into Flowers” That project was a result of an artist in residency at Natomas Charter School, Academy of Performing and Fine Arts in Sacramento, CA, and the installation was done on March 16, 2019. The handmade paper quilt has a pattern of many different types and shapes of guns, and the paper pulp has seeds for wildflowers in the same colors and patterns. The installation was made with the participation of students at Natomas Charter School, and the “guns” will transform over time into living, blooming wildflowers as the handmade paper quilt dissolves into mulch and the seeds sprout and grow. Check back on this Blog in a few weeks to see how it progresses. The seeds are already beginning to sprout, and the wildflower plants are growing taller.

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