homage to the seed weblog . . .

Sunday, March 31, 2013

The Inspiration Garden, Morningside , Brisbane

Yesterday I spent the morning in this wonderful garden set up by Andrew and Nancy Kent. 




































I added an album on my Facebook page here!
  
Great story on the Inspiration garden at a growing venture: EDIBLE YARDS

And the blog for the Inspiration Garden.

Nancy was one of the speakers at the recent Biodiversity Dialogue events I held in conjunction with my February Exhibition. She gave a short talk on the project and how it is set up to include community and function over time.


Flyer for Biodiversity Dialogue event




The Inspiration Garden
Blog banner and contact details.
More here: BLOG

Nancy: left standing and right working: images Edible Yards


Text from EDIBLE YARDS POST:

The Inspiration Garden is a neighbourhood permaculture garden situated near the Seven Hills bushland, Brisbane. The Inspiration Garden began when Nancy and Andrew Kent decided to take a small step towards a more sustainable lifestyle by creating a place where all are welcome to make friends and learn about sustainable lifestyle and permaculture.
The garden is now well established with a great following of volunteers supporting, growing and developing the garden, with over 600 people paying a visit to the garden since it’s creation in October 2010.
Nancy Says “Our volunteering program is unique as each volunteer works one on one beside an experienced gardener. We tailor the volunteering session to the needs of the volunteer. There is always so much to do around the garden that there is a wide variety of activities to choose from. If it is raining we do indoor activities like seed saving and packaging.”
Nancy holds educational courses and workshop sessions which include organic gardening and soil creation, what weeds and pests are saying to us, sustainable eco gardening, how to grow food in pots, Awakening the Dreamer Symposiums, film evenings, neighbourhood garden cook ups and Inspiring the Heart reflection sessions.


All are invited to contact the gracious hosts of this venture to participate in workshops on offer or in volunteering and learning more about the project. Lateral thinkers that they are ... there are many ways community are able to benefit and contribute to the life if this project.

Our encouragement and support for such ventures is paid back in so many ways. I hope you find a chance to visit sometime if in this region. 

Thanks for a wonderful time Nancy and Andrew!

I'll be back soon!





Below: The Garden layout.   Read more at history link.











See you there!
Posted by Sophie Munns at 12:09 PM 9 comments:
Labels: children, real food source, regeneration, sustainablility, Urban Ag, workshops for children and adults

Monday, March 18, 2013

Cairns Botanic Gardens a memorable piece of tropical architecture

I just wrote a post this blog sophie munns : visual eclectica : a memorable piece of tropical architecture after finding a story at Dezeen on this new architecture recently designed and built at the Gardens in Cairns.

I will add a section of that post here:

This morning I found a story at Dezeen on a place I spent a month last year on residency in Cairns in Far North Queensland.


Images I took during the month up north... 

    daily reminder of my exhibition deadline that I walked past at the Entrance


 The photos from this Dezeen article were brilliant and I so wanted to share this post that I went to the Dezeen Copyright page to check what was feasible to share. Having learnt there that as long as I dont repost the article in its entirely I can share the following, especially as I don't make a practice of doing this which would of course upset things.

SO... please note that all this content I am about to share has been taken from Dezeen's article: http://www.dezeen.com/2013/03/11/cairns-botanic-gardens-visitors-centre-by-charles-wright/ and I hope you enjoy reading about this. At first sight, I might add, I was a little thrown by the use of the mirrors. I didn't particularly associate this as a building material one would bring to a Botanic Garden... however ... as I spent most days passing through the Visitor's Centre I found it really worked.

Many comments at the post were about birds crashing into the building and dying... but I must say I never saw nor heard reports or whispers on that during the month I was there... so perhaps not being a tall building its not impacting that particular issue greatly.

Via DEZEEN:


This mirror-clad visitor centre by Australian firm Charles Wright Architects was designed to be invisible amongst the surrounding trees of the Cairns Botanic Gardens in Queensland.
Cairns Botanic Gardens by Charles Wright Architects
Comprising two buildings and a dividing promenade, the visitor centre was designed as a gateway to the gardens, which contain a selection of tropical plants from northern Australian rainforests as well as from across Southeast Asia.
Cairns Botanic Gardens by Charles Wright Architects
Charles Wright Architects drew inspiration from the suit worn by the alien-hunter in the 1987 movie Predator to give both buildings a reflective outer coating that would play down their impact on the park landscape. "We proposed a design which literally reflects the gardens as camouflage for the building," explain the architects.
Cairns Botanic Gardens by Charles Wright Architects
Rather than cover the surfaces with a single polished plane of metal, the architects added a series of flat panels that break the facade down into facets. Each one sits at an incrementally different angle and helps to muddle the reflected images.
Cairns Botanic Gardens by Charles Wright Architects
The pedestrian promenade runs across the site from east to west. To the north, one building contains a cafe and exhibition area for visitors, with a multi-purpose hall and a courtyard amphitheatre, while to the south a second block accommodates staff offices that open out to a long and narrow terrace.
Both buildings have non-linear shapes, generated by the routes of predefined pathways and locations of mature trees. They also have to nestle against the landscape at one end where the ground starts to climb upwards around them.
Charles Wright Architects have offices in Melbourne and Shanghai. The firm also recently completed a house that can withstand powerful cyclones. See more architecture in Australia.
Cairns Botanic Gardens by Charles Wright Architects
See more stories about mirrors on Dezeen, including a polished steel pavilion by Foster + Partners and a playground pavilion in Copenhagen.
Cairns Botanic Gardens by Charles Wright Architects
Photography is by Patrick Bingham Hall.
Click to see the slideshow.

See more on the Conceptual Framework: 


I have much catching up to do at this blog but this week I'm moving out of the Paddington Studio so I will be back as soon as I can.
If you wish to see the my exhibition online from February  'From one small seed: Encounters in Bio-cultural Diversity' then visit Recent work tumblr for a visual tour!
cheers, S


Posted by Sophie Munns at 8:39 AM 3 comments:
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WELCOME TO HOMAGE TO THE SEED WEB-LOG ... COMMENCED IN FEBRUARY 2010 BY VISUAL ARTIST SOPHIE MUNNS!

HOMAGE TO THE SEED was launched by Sophie Munns for the 2010 Brisbane Botanic Gardens Artist-In-Residency program at Mt Coot-tha, Brisbane. The residency focused on our extraordinary regional and global Seed heritage - the critical work of seed conservation and the future of seeds - coinciding with the
2010 International Year of Biodiversity.

This project is continuing in 2013. Pop over to the website for an overview of this project. Contributions of articles, comments and inquiries are most welcome!
Sophie Munns

Blog header image: May, 2014 Residency at PLANTBANK, NSW Australia

OTHER WEBLINKS

website:
Sophie Munns

Scoop-it site curated by Sophie Munns:
Bio {Cultural} Diversity

Eclectic, magazine-like weblog at
sophie munns - visual artist

Artwork by SOPHIE MUNNS can be seen at
sophie munns studio

New Tumblr blog:
From one small seed

Tumblr blog:
seed capsules

Facebook page:
Homage to the Seed

Twitter:
sophie munns

Communications:
e: sophiemunns @ iinet . net . au

Image of work from current Seed Project

N E W :

Instagram

STUDIO LAUNCH OF SEED.ART.LAB

STUDIO LAUNCH OF SEED.ART.LAB
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NEW ONLINE SHOP

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SOPHIE MUNNS ARTWORKS + Homage to the Seed postcards available now at the NEW ONLINE Shop!

RECENT EXHIBITION ONLINE NOW!

RECENT EXHIBITION ONLINE NOW!

Click here to go to online exhibition of "From one small seed"

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HOMAGE TO THE SEED COMMUNITY

A NEW TUMBLR SITE STARTED FOR INTERNATIONAL FASCINATION OF PLANTS DAY, MAY 1TH 2012

A NEW TUMBLR SITE STARTED FOR INTERNATIONAL FASCINATION OF PLANTS DAY, MAY 1TH 2012
FROM ONE SMALL SEED

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  • 14/12/2011 - Homage to the Seed - UK Research Trip
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MAY NEWS :

MAY NEWS :
UQ Residency for International Fascination of Plants Day - May 18th!

STARTED IN SEPTEMBER 2011:

HOMAGE TO THE SEED PAGE

at

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NB:
I've chosen to keep a public page at Facebook ... not the personal- friends aspect of FB. If you have seed-related material worth posting on this FB page I'd be pleased to share it there. I find its a most useful archive for items to return to later !

HOMEGROWN 2011: WRAP UP!


Read here about this exciting event held at Southbank, Brisbane over July.

READ ABOUT THE END OF YEAR EVENT ON THE RESIDENCY CALENDER FOR 2010

The Residency concluded with 'Homage to the Seed' - an exhibition of works produced over the course of 2010. It was held at the Herbarium at Brisbane Botanic Gardens on the first weekend of December.

To read more about the final event on the 2010 Residency calendar click here (website) and here at this blog..

books, films and more rain...

An artist's 68 page book was produced to document the year's work. Available for $40 plus postage. Only a few copies left (as of March 2014)

Hear Sophie Munns on local ABC Radio Nov, 2010 interveiwed by Phil Smith.

THIS PROJECT HAS BEEN GOING SINCE FEB 2010 ... A NEW BOOK IS UNDERWAY ( MARCH 2014) !!

KEW GARDENS MILLENNIUM SEED BANK PROJECT

The Millennium Seed Bank Project (MSBP) is the largest ex-situ conservation project ever conceived. Its partners willl have banked seed from 10% of the world's wild plant species by the end of the decade. These will not just be any plants, but will include the rarest, most threatened species known to man. Read more about Kew's preservation project

kew.org website.

'Seeds for Life', the Qld chapter of the Millennium Seedbank Partnership, is based at the Seed Lab on the grounds of Brisbane Botanic Gardens at Mt Coot-tha.

Featured on BLOGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD at the UN INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF BIODIVERSITY WEBSITE


UNITED NATIONS INTERNATIONAL

YEAR OF BIODIVERSITY 2010

B L O G S
fromA R O U N D
T h e W O R L D:
homage to the seed – generator of life
By Sophie Munns.

HERE.

Brisbane, Australia


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Mid July: THE WEEK THAT WAS!


Read the overview of OPEN STUDIO WEEK here.


SEED POD INSPIRATION FROM AROUND THE GLOBE VIA SOUTH AFRICA

Visit Robyn Gordon's wonderful blog ART PROPELLED and see a story she put together on artists who work with seed pod forms for inspiration in their art practices. You may recognise some "homage to the seed" links as well - with thanks to Robyn.
Read more here as well!





UNITED NATIONS INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF BIODIVERSITY 2010

International Year of Biodiversity officially launched

on 11 January 2010 in Berlin.

Press release from Bioversity International

With the official launch of the International Year of Biodiversity scheduled for 11 January 2010 in Berlin, Germany, Emile Frison, the Director General of Bioversity International, warns that there is much more to biodiversity than whales and panda bears.

“Any discussion of biodiversity conservation needs to remember that the diversity of crops and livestock is absolutely fundamental to human survival and well-being,” Frison said. “Agricultural biodiversity is not only vital for nutrition, it is also indispensable in meeting the challenges of climate change and in lifting poor people out of poverty.”

For too long, conservationists have tended to view farmers and farming as the enemy. While in many cases that may be true, the International Year of Biodiversity offers a great opportunity to work towards more productive food systems based on biodiversity and a more ecological approach to agriculture.

“Increased productivity so far has been based on simplifying farming systems,” Frison noted. “We need to move beyond that to intensification without simplification, and that requires us to research, understand and make better use of agricultural biodiversity.”

Bioversity research has shown how neglected and under-utilized species can deliver better nutrition and health, at the same time protecting the environment and increasing incomes. It is also pinpointing the impact of predicted changes in climate on crops and suggesting new sources of material that will help farmers adapt to new weather patterns.

ART SCIENCE COLLABORATION

Collaboration between the arts and sciences has the potential to create new knowledge,ideas and processes beneficial to both fields. Artists and scientists approach creativity, exploration and research in different ways and from different perspectives; when working together they open up new ways of seeing, experiencing and interpreting the world around us.

For the past decade,the Australian Network for Art & Technology (ANAT) has provided opportunities for artists and scientists to work together. Our most recent projects, delivered under the Synapse brand in partnership with the Australia Council for the Arts, include residencies, the Synapse database and a moderated elist.

Click here to view profiles of artists on this site and for further information.

HERITAGE SEED SAVING

Tip 1. 'Who's your daddy?' explains the relevance of discovering whether your parent plant is a hybrid, heirloom or open-pollinated variety.

If you are not sure why this is so critical then dont be shy about asking or seeking advice, wherever you live on this globe of ours. Lately quite a few people have told me of their astonishment at finding something they had gone to the trouble of saving and planting much later had turned out to be hybridised and incapable of reproducing.

Once we've had this frustrating experience the eagerness to understand what is now happening with seeds is awakened - which is a very positive thing.

Tip 2: become a mad scientist. Know your plant's specific name.

On a March 8 post titled ' The archeology of the everyday' I added links to a number of Australian Seed Saving organisations and places to find heritage seeds.

At the side-bar on the right-hand side down towards the end I have listed websites and blogs you can visit. This will be updated from time to time. Also check the titles of the blog archive for other related posts.


The Australian organisation Seedsavers which started in Byron Bay has a blog with excellent links here to films, books, local seed networks, permaculture, and news.

To read about their account of starting Seed savers click here.

SUPPORT BIODIVERSITY THROUGH EATING LOCAL

The growth of Farmers or Growers Markets adds another welcome layer to the effort to bring focus back to the source of things.... and to find those growers who value the big picture and the future story enough to go the extra distance to produce in a eco-sustainable way.
Here are some australian initiatives working in ways that champion Biodiversity.

www.foodconnect.com.au

JOIN BRIGHTER PLANET . COM

Brighter Planet's 350 Challenge
CLICK ON BRIGHTER PLANET!

WEBSITES

  • ABC TV GARDENING AUSTRALIA -native plants fact sheets
  • Atlas of Living Australia - sharing biodiversity knowledge
  • Australia's premier resource for native seed -initiative of Australian Govt, Greening Australia and CSIRO
  • Australia's Virtual Herbarium - Australia's Comonwealth, State and territory herbaria house over 6 million plant, algae and funghi specimens. The collecting information stored with these speciemns provides the most complete picture of the distribution of Australia's flora to date-limited access unless you log in!.
  • Australian Biological Resources Study -ABRS
  • Australian Native Plants Society (Australia) -Plant Propagation from Seed
  • Australian Native plants Society -growing and promoting australian plants since 1957
  • Australian Plant Collectors and Illustrators : 1780s-1980's
  • Australian Tropical Herbarium - collections held in Cairns Campus of james Cook University
  • Australin Bushfoods Magazine -news updates and interesting links
  • Bioversity International -improving lives through biodiversity research
  • Brisbane Organic Growers Inc
  • BUSH BLITZ: Australia's largest nature discovery project - 3 year project to document plants and animals across Australia's National Reserve System and uncover new species to protect our biodiversity into the future
  • Classic studies linked to Biodiversity Conservation from ConservationBytes.com
  • Climate Change and Australia's Botanic Gardens - a resource site
  • Conservation genetices form CSIRO - the right seed for the right area and realted information
  • ConservationBytes.com - conservation research ... with bite
  • diggers club - australia's largest garden club - worth a visit
  • Directory of Australian Botanic Gardens and Arboreta
  • earthling enterprises
  • ecobotanica - growing natural solutions: Brisbane
  • Eden Project - UK based project in Biodiversity
  • Environmental Art Collective : Brisbane
  • Flora of Australia online
  • Garden Web Australia - the internet's gardening community
  • Global Biodiversity Information Facility
  • Greening Australia - passionate about protecting and restoring health, diversity and productivity of our unique Australian landscapes
  • Growing native Plants: from Canberra Botanic Gardens-on the web
  • Indigenous Cultural Heritage - Qld Environment and Resource Management
  • Kew Gardens - 250 years of history at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, UK
  • Local Harvest - Sunshine Coast's Regional Food and Produce Directory
  • Michael Pollan - 'In defense of food' , 'Omnivore's dilemma' - writer on contemporary issues around food
  • Millennium Seedbank Project : Kew Gardens UK
  • Native grass resources group
  • Native Plant Seedbank for Central Qld
  • New South Wales Flora Onlne
  • noosa biosphere - Qld's first UNESCO Biosphere promoting harmony between people and nature though eduction, conservation and sustainable activities
  • Northy Street City Farm
  • Qld Bulletin board- Greening Australia
  • Queensland Herbarium -Biodiversity Sciences - the centre for research and information on the QLD flora, vegetation and plant communities
  • Research in Art Nature and Environment
  • RESURGENCE: magazine promoting ecological sustainability, social justice and spiritual values.
  • Seed and Plant Genetic Resources Service
  • SEED LIBRARY -hudson valley
  • Seeds of Change - preserving Biodiversity and supporting sustainable organic agriculture since 1989
  • select organic - suppliers of quality non-hybrid/organic seeds
  • Slow Food Australia -network thats parto internation movt to form connection between farmers and consumers and much more
  • Stephanie Alexander - and the Kitchen Garden Foundation
  • Sustainable Gardening Australia
  • The Australian Network for Plant Conservation Inc - working tosave australia's native plants
  • The Australian Tree Seed Centre - CSIRO Plant Industry management.
  • The Botanical Discovery of Australia - map of European voyages of discovery
  • The Dilly Bag -authentic aboriginal tucker - Pomona QLD
  • The Edible Schoolyard - Alice Waters and the Edible Schoolyard
  • The Ethicurian -chew the right thing
  • Wildlife and Ecosystems - threatened species - Qld

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Brisbane Seed Savers

A Local Seed Network (LSN) that has joined with many others who are actively conserving our heritage open pollinated seeds.


I found this network through Brisbane Local Food which I have just joined after reading about them at Transition Towns.
Brisbane Local Food - growing local in subtropical Australia is an active community that holds open days, exchange info, seeds, plants. recipes and help and keep connected to what's going on in this realm beyond their own backyards...

I have just been reading about the LOGAN COMMUNITY GARDEN with an African flavour here:

The land, roughly 20m x more than 50m, is donated by Griffith University right along the Logan Motorway, certainly not small by comparison to other community farms in Brissy. There're quite a few facilities donated and hand-built by the volunteers including toilets, wash-up area, a traditional African Hut, children's playground, lockable 20 foot container to store tools and a shaded area with work benches. Water is managed by the council and pumped in from a nearby lake.






From THE GARDEN DIGEST on SEEDS

One for the rock, one for the crow,
One to die, and one to grow.
- English saying

"I don't believe the half I hear,

Nor the quarter of what I see!

But I have one faith, sublime and true,
That nothing can shake or slay;
Each spring I firmly believe anew
All the seed catalogues say!"
- Carolyn Wells

Whether you tend a garden or not, you are the gardener of your own being,

the seed of your destiny.
- The Findhorn Community

The love of gardening is a seed that once sown never dies.- Gertrude Jekyll

Though I do not believe that a plant will spring up where no seed has

been, I have great faith in a seed. Convince me that you have a seed
there, and I am prepared to expect wonders.
- Henry David Thoreau

Don't judge each day by the harvest you reap, but by the seeds you plant.

- Robert Louis Stevenson

dry seeds scatter

from my hand into the wind
one clings
as if to say there is in me
something yet to be
- Jeanne Emrich,
Haiga Online


I ask not for a larger garden,
but for finer seeds.
- Russell H.Conwell

There is a way to see inside

By looking directly through
to seed or marrow

Within the bone vessel
a world is made
Red and milkweed
it flows between us like
wind

Within the seed's case
a secret is held
Its fertile whisper
shapes a song
-
Joan Halifax, Marrow

Think of the fierce energy concentrated in an acorn!

You bury it in the ground, and it explodes into an oak!
Bury a sheep, and nothing happens but decay.
- George Bernard Shaw

The seed cannot sprout upwards without simultaneously sending roots into the ground.


The seed includes all the possibilities of the tree. ... The seed will develop these
possibilities, however, only if it receives corresponding energies from the sky.


Grain must return to the earth, die, and decompose for new growth to begin.
- Ancient Egyptian Proverbs

He places a seed in the dust for the reason

That it may in the day of distress, give fruit.
- Sadi

Poetry is like a free bird that knows no boundary, like seeds
that are carried along by the wind, that grow, bloom and bear
fruit where they find good soil without
asking anyone's permission.
- Ion Codrescu

The word "miracle" aptly describes a seed.
- Jack Kramer

All seed answer light, but the color is different.

The plant reveals what is in the seed.
- Ancient Egyptian Proverbs

Think small.
Planting tiny seeds in the small space given you
Can change the whole world or,
At the very least, your view of it.
- Linus Mundy

to read more click

Quotes for Gardeners

A Collection Growing to Over 3,300 Quotes Arranged by 135 Topics
Quotes, Sayings, Proverbs, Poetry, Maxims, Quips, Cliches, Wisdom
Compiled by Michael P. Garofalo

Thanks to Nicki Laws for sending this link to the Homage Blog!

28.8.10

ADOPT A SEED - project from Kew Gardens, UK

ADOPT A SEED - project from Kew Gardens, UK
part of the Millennium Seedbank Project.
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