Sunday 15 June 2014

Artist Made Pieces of Land Art by Rocks & Leafs.



Dietmar Voorworld is skillful artist who finds in nature and turns them into memorable pieces of land art by rocks, pebbles and leafs. When he was on Greece visit, he starts playing with the sand and pebbles on one of its beaches and felt an artistic inclination to create something special art.  

Dietmar Voorworld first mosaic arose out of that experience and he sustained down this path, seeing it more as a playful hobby than a full-time career. He started to snapshot of his works, and after finding a resilient connection to the beauty of Scottish landscapes, he eventually decided to settle down in northern Scotland, creating spectacular land art works along its coasts. He says; my installations blend perfectly into the landscape and often appear to have been there forever. Harmony is really imperative to me, as well as handling the gifts of nature with due respect. 

I can’t really sure the request as to why I make art in nature. I only know that I feel very decent with it. Despite all the experiments involved in working with nature, I continue venturing out with flawless enthusiasm. I’m simply following the call of my soul. So whether I like it or not, nature is the true and never-ending source of my inspiration, my grandest stage. Here I feel free and at home. To work with her, and in her, is a fabulous gift. In a word, my artistic work has something to do with peace. Peace with nature, with the weather and stones, the light and the enigmatic ocean. Peace with myself. 
 
 

Friday 13 June 2014

The Unique Umbrella Shaped “Dragon's Blood Trees” Which Produced Red Sap


Perhaps the most prominent and distinct plant that evocatively named “Dragon’s Blood Tree” has a unique and bizarre appearance, it is overturned, densely-packed crown having the shape of an upside-down umbrella. Dragon’s blood trees are a unique and slow growing but potentially long-lived species that is very native to the Socotra archipelago off the horn of Africa. It is so popular due to the red sap that the trees produce. The prominent red resin that gives it its name is exuded from the bark after wounding. This evergreen plant is a substance which has been highly prized since ancient times, and has been the major commercial source of this resin, and many myths surround the rare trees. The “dragon’s blood” resin of this tree exudes naturally from fissures and wounds in the bark, and is frequently harvested by widening these fissures with a knife. The resin has had numerous different uses since ancient times, including to color wool, varnishes and plaster, to decorate houses and pottery, and in ritual magic. It is also used for many medicinal purposes, including as an antiseptic, antiviral, anti-diarrhetic, and for treating tumors, and in addition contains compounds with beneficial antioxidant properties.

The medicinal and coloring properties of this resin, and that from other dragon trees, was recorded by the ancient civilizations of Greece and Rome. It continues to be used in medicine, dyes, varnish and incense to this day. Similar to other monocotyledons, such as palms, the tree grows from the tip of the stem, with the long, stiff leaves borne in dense rosettes at the end. However, contrasting too many palms, the dragon’s blood tree branches at maturity to produce the characteristic umbrella-shaped crown with the leaves, which measure up to 60 centimeters long and 3 centimeters wide, remaining crowded at the branch tips. Dragon’s Blood Trees trunk and branches are thick and stout, and show ‘dichotomous’ branching, in which each branch repeatedly divides into two. The first description was made in 1835 when The East India Company led by Lieutenant Wellsted made a survey of Socotra and gives the description to Pterocarpus Draco, but in 1880, the Scottish botanist Isaac Bayley Balfour made a formal description of the species and renamed it as “Dracaena Cinnabari”. Of between 60 and 100 Dracaena species, D. Cinnabari is one of only 6 species which grows as a tree.

The tree usually flowers in Feb; however exact flowering time may vary and depends on location. Normally flowers grow at the ends of the branches, comprises of branched inflorescences bearing clusters of small, fragrant, white or greenish flowers. The fruit usually takes five months to completely develop, which is small fleshy berry that transform from green to black as it ripens, to end becoming orange-red, and containing between one and three seeds. The berries may be eaten by animals and birds, including domestic livestock, which then act as seed dispersers.

Due to its unique flora and fauna, the Socotra Archipelago is designated as a World Heritage Site, a WWF Global 200 Ecoregion, a Centre of Plant Diversity and an Endemic Bird Area, and it also lies within the Horn of Africa biodiversity “hotspot”. Numerous initiatives are underway to aid sustainable development and biodiversity management on Socotra & the dragon’s blood tree is considered an important flagship species for conservation on the island, and an “umbrella species”, whose protection would also benefit many other plants and animals.

 Dragon’s Blood Tree is usually found at elevations of 300 to 1,500 metres, preferring limestone-based soil and naturally growing in evergreen or semi­-deciduous woodland. It is the only tree-forming Dracaena species to form dense woodland and frequently appears to grow well in areas of solid rock pavement with wide-ranging cracks, down which water and soil can flow after rains, however; as long as moisture and nourishment for the roots. The tree’s pattern of distribution closely matches the areas of the island that experience normal low cloud, rain and drizzle during the monsoon season.

The Drangon’s Blood Tree bizarre shape assists to survive in often arid conditions and on mountaintops with little soil. Early morning mists condense on the waxy, skyward-pointing leaves, the water then channeling down the trunk to the roots. The vast densely packed crown also offers highly effective shade, so dropping the evaporation of any water drops that fall to the ground, and giving shade to the tree’s roots. This shading allows seedlings to survive better beneath the adult tree than in full sun, which could be why many dragon’s blood trees grow close together.

The dragon’s blood tree is still relatively widespread, but its range has become abridged and fragmented, and various populations are suffering from poor regeneration. Though human activities may have play a bigger contribution to this deterioration, like overgrazing and the feeding of the flowers and fruit to livestock, the main threat to the species is thought to come from the gradual drying out of the Socotra Archipelago, a process that has been ongoing for the last few hundred years, but which may be exacerbated by global climate change. In many cases, the trees are failing to flourish, and the extent and duration of the mist and cloud brought by the monsoon appears to be decreasing. Growing aridity is foreseen to cause a 45 % dropping in available habitat for this species by the year 2080.

Other impending threats to the dragon’s blood tree, such as harvesting of its resin and the use of its leaves to develop rope, have decreased in recent years and are currently small-scale, but in future rise in demand could potentially lead to over-collection. Some dragon’s blood trees have been felled to make beehives. Though this was usually condemned, and it illustrates how the species may be threatened by a breakdown in traditional practices on the island.
  



Friday 6 June 2014

Incredible Man-Made Tunnels Formed with Wires & Repurposed Wood



Some artists are really incredible just like Henrique Oliveira’s, whose installation titled “Transarquitetônica” offer you to go on a fantastical journey through a cavernous interior. His fresh completed work is his largest till date, and he has magnificently created a fully-immersive environment inside of a large, root-like system. Upon entering in tunnels you can follow multiple paths that lead you throughout the sculpture while you are fully surrounded by repurposed wood pieces that are tacked together and look like bark on a tree. 

To construct a massive “Transarquitetônica” Henrique first built a skeleton framework and tighten up the joints with zip ties. Tapumes, which is fragile wood normally used in siding, was then layered and applied as the “skin” for the interior and exterior of the work. This makes for an engaging and surreal viewer experience that looks astonishing from the outside as branches twist around themselves in addition to the beams that are positioned inside of the gallery. Henrique Oliveira colossal sculpture will be on view at Museu de Arte Contemporânea da Universidade in São Paulo through the end of November this year. So far you can view his magnificent work in pictures, or if you have the opportunity, take a trip through the winding tunnels.

A Lady Found Her Wedding Ring After 16 Years, Growing on a Carrot.


Some events in life are extremely unpredictable and mystify you. Like a woman found her ring 16 Years Later, amazingly growing on a Carrot. A Swedish lady named Lena Paahlsson lost her wedding ring long back in 1995. She took it off while baking and never found it. The ring was searched pedantically back then, even beneath the floor tiles. Here’s the bizarre part; the ring turned up only just, 16 years after she lost it. Lena Paahlsson was picking up carrots in her garden recently, and found the ring stuck in the middle of a carrot. The ring was donning a carrot which was pretty incredible. What can be deduced is that sixteen years back the ring might have fallen into the sink with the vegetable peelings. The peelings might have composted beneath the earth, but the ring stayed; only to appear again after 16 years.
Mrs Paahlsson was pulling up carrots in her garden that she noticed one with the gold band fastened tightly around it. Lena and her husband says; it is incredible that they’ve found their lost ring. We’ve given up the hopes, but now she wanted to have the ring adjusted to fit her. Now that I have found the ring again I want to be able to.