Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Yellow and Black Caution Hood on Finn

From 'One Place After Another' by Miwon Kwon

“…The more we travel for work, the more we are called upon to provide institutions in other parts of the country and the world with our presence and services, the more we give in to the logic of nomadism, one could say, the more we are made to feel wanted, needed, validated and relevant. Our very sense of self-worth seems predicated more and more on our suffering through the inconveniences and psychic destabilizations of ungrounded transience, of not being at home (or not having a home), of always traveling through elsewheres. Whether we enjoy it or not, we are culturally and economically rewarded for enduring the ‘wrong’ place. We are out of place all too often. Or, perhaps more accurately, the distinction between home and elsewhere, between ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ places, seems less and les relevant in the constitution of the self." MIWON KWON

Red and White Poncho


Barrier Ribbon Cape on Dave

Viral Plastic Safety Fencing


Suburbia

“Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them.” BILL VAUGHAN

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Knox City - 'Parking' Project Prototype


Boronia, the suburb name and railway station, made me begin to consider at the Knox site the naturally occurring vegetation that had been removed for the development.

As Knox was the first American style car suburb in Melbourne, I wondered what might be under the car park asphalt – what used to be there. This was prompted by a story I was told about the resilience of nature when I was living in the Blue Mountains. A fifty years old garden shed was being demolished. The concrete slab was removed and a few weeks later the seeds of local wildflowers that had lain dormant in the soil germinated.

I researched plants indigenous to the Knox area. I came across online an inventory of indigenous plant species extracted from the document ‘Sites of Biological Significance in Knox’ drafted in 2004 by Dr G. Lorimer. The document categorised theenvironmental status of plants in the Knox area. i.e.) ‘X’ presumed extinct; ‘C’ Critically endangered; ‘E’ Endangered; ‘V’ Vulnerable; ‘R’ Rare; ‘K’ Suspected to be rare or threatened; ‘S’ Secure but not abundant or common; ‘L’ Least concern. There was in fact a Knox City project through the 1990’s that involved re-establishing habitat for the endangered Sword-Grass Brown Butterfly by planting its favoured fruit Red-Fruit Saw-Sedge..

Plants such as the Heart Lip Spider Orchid were deemed extinct. The Grey Everlasting (Ozothamnus obcordatus) was critically endangered with one plant existing in Boronia. The Silver Banksia (Banksia marginata) was vulnerable as was the Hairy Speedwell (Veronica calycina). The Tender Brake (Pteris tremula) was rare. This is only a small sample from the list.

During research for images of these plants, I located a botanical illustration of a Banksia marginata dated 1843 tentatively attributed to Samuel Curtis.

'Parking'

I propose to reinstate nature in the car park and reclaim the public space currently dominated by cars. I will install car covers over the cars. The covers at Knox would have large-scale drawings cut through the cover material. The drawing at Knox would focus on at risk indigenous species. Utilising a pre-existing product reduces costs and due to its protective function that is cancelled out through cutting, it brings into play levels of questioning such as what needs to be protected. Being installed over cars at shopping centres it also raises issues surrounding consumption of goods and fossil fuels,

This concept could form the prototype of a much larger guerrilla installation of covered cars. This could occur at other large scale shopping destinations such as Highpoint and Chadstone. Artists would be invited to participate in a large-scale public artwork, where each would be involved in producing an individual creative response that would comprise part of a larger scale collaborative work.

Tree Intervention - what I don't like about public space!





This little Orr Street tree has been buffeted by the comings and goings from the construction site across the road all year. I think a version of RSPCA for plants might be a good idea. My intervention, a 'tree bumper' made from recyled materials hopefully brings attention in a small way to how nature is mistreated in an urban setting, in particular how cars dominate the environment.