Life in a bucket. I’ve seen this before and written about it in an older blog post. Regardless, whenever I encounter something like this I remain amazed at life’s ability to thrive in less than optimum circumstances. A little river mud in an old broken plastic bucket gets colonized by a few windblown grass seeds, add a little rainfall and sunshine and life does the rest. Well, some life can do this and some can’t. The future will be determined by the life that can adapt and be resilient in the face of adversity. Walking on the fossil beds at the Falls of the Ohio I wonder about our chances for success living on a planet that we have diminished to suit our own ends. I have no doubt that whatever the future holds, life will find a way. Whether or not that includes us remains to be seen.
On that jolly note I introduce my latest two projects! I got up fairly early in the morning and got a head start on the heat. By the early afternoon, I was whipped, exhausted, and wet from the humidity trapped in the local vegetation. Summer is officially upon us. It’s interesting how many conversations I’ve had this year with people similar in age to me who have remarked that as the years pass by their tolerance for the heat and humidity decreases. This was one of those days I could commiserate with them! As I was walking along the Falls landscape, I noticed an area that seemed to have a good supply of plastic containers and decided on the spot to do another petroleum rainbow piece. This is how I started out, literally beating the bushes for containers of different sizes, colors, and shapes. The material lying on the driftwood was easy to access, but in other places the vines were beginning to cover and camouflage what was under their urgent greenness.
I started out collecting various plastic jugs that originally held contents of one gallon or greater…hence “big jug”. I soon expanded that as the need for particular shades of colors became a priority. I would have liked to use more “orange”, but couldn’t find enough plastic containers in this area that day that were that color. Still, I managed a small sliver of “orange” to mark the transition from “red” to “yellow”.
“Big Jug Rainbow” is situated under a stressed willow tree that is bent over from the weight of lots of driftwood that was deposited in its canopy by flood waters. A nice verdant cave was formed and it felt like a good framing element for this piece. Here is what it looked like from the other side of the tree.
The willow trees in this habitat are twisted up and have lots of character. They remind me of the forms you find in bonsai trees, except their size is obviously much larger. In a past post, I’ve mentioned how this area’s beavers like to prune off small branches and eat the bark. This helps shape the trees. This year, I can see in dramatic fashion another element that contributes to the trees’ overall forms. The weight of the deposited wood bends the branches down and the willow continues to grow under this burden. The driftwood will remain in the tree until the river rises or the wind knocks the deposited logs down.
Bleaching, exposed driftwood atop a willow tree with my “Big Jug Rainbow” under its influence. Happy with this piece, I collected my bag and walking stick and headed further under the trees seeking shade and relief from the sun. Along the way, I was delighted to run into one of my favorite insects found at the Falls of the Ohio.
This is the Eastern Eyed Click Beetle or Big Eyed Click Beetle, (Alaus oculatus). This is one of the larger beetles you will find in our area and this is the largest of our click beetles. The biggest specimens are nearly two inches long or roughly 45mm in length. They have this wonderful, cryptic bird-dropping coloring. The eyespots on the pronatum or thorax are dramatic and large. The females lay their eggs in or near rotting wood (in abundance here) and I’m sure to come across these slow flyers at least a couple of times per season. Last year, I was startled when one landed on the back of my head and got tangled in my hair. It gave me a momentary fright to have some then unknown large insect crawling on my head. Fortunately, they don’t bite. The larvae on the other hand will eat other insects they encounter.
As has been my recent custom, as I walk along I collect any lost flip-flops that I find. At day’s end, I find a place to make something with the day’s finds. I came across this table-like tree stump that seemed like an invitation to do something with. I emptied the contents of my collecting bag and created “Stump Flower”.
The circular form in the center I believe is a sand toy? I found it laying nearby and thought it helped suggest a flower head. I think as I return to many of the places where I’ve made these flip-flop projects…I will re-gather them and perhaps recycle them into a more complex form. At day’s end, the walk back to my vehicle took a lot of effort. I did go by my “Big Jug Rainbow” piece and took one last image of it from some distance. You can barely see it through all the leafage, but it is there in all its artificial glory. That bottle of warm water I had stashed under the car seat sure tasted good! Thanks to everybody for stopping by…until next time from the Falls of the Ohio.
“The future will be determined by the life that can adapt and be resilient in the face of adversity.” You can see this all around in every place and like you i love seeing it. We often forget how strong nature is. Willow is an other example of this.
When we create a diverse natural environment plants and animals will have a good change. Mono-culture is extremely vulnerable when a decease comes along it can wipe out completely leaving an area bare and devastated.
Love the last photo of the hidden rainbow.
So good to hear from you! I often wonder how you are doing? All around me I can see a loss of natural diversity as plants from Europe and insects from Asia compete against the indigenous. I suspect this is happening everywhere simultaneously until only the truly tough and adaptable organisms will inherit the less than pristine Earth.
Al, I swear you can turn anything into art. The flipflops on the tree stump- it looks just like a flower in the close-up- that’s pretty amazing. You have fantastic vision! I think the beauty of your work is also that you never complicate things. You keep them simplistic in form and I think people really connect with that. The first pic (life in a bucket) speaks volumes. :0) Also, I think the collection of coloured plastic containers can be likened to seeing an artist’s paints squeezed out onto a brown palette. Beautiful work- all of it. 🙂
Enjoyed this very much. Your Rainbow Containers piece reminded me of a display I saw in a rather superior Gallery Gift Shop yesterday.
PS – except that they were beautiful hand-crafted glass goblets , bottles and bowls etc in rainbow colours..
As much as I like your big jug rainbow piece, I am so disgusted by the fact that you found all this in one day at the falls? Your work is a constant reminder to me to be diligent in my recycling, Al. I am amazed at what gets trapped in my bushes, in the way of trash, in a week’s time.You do good work!
Thanks Leslie. My work here does provoke mixed feelings. The river has been very high the past two months and a new supply of junk is floating by. Seems this year we have had our own monsoon season! How about you?
Oh my goodness, Al. I live on the north side of Fort Wayne, Indiana and we are flooding all around up here! They are releasing water from several of the dams on a schedule, now, and that is one of the reasons I came to visit you; to see if you had written about the effects of the rain filtering down to you and evidenced by the height of the river’s water this year. I am imagining that even more trash gets picked up and deposited during years such as these… When it finally recedes, you will find a fortune in trash!
I had wondered and I’m not surprised you are wet too! I just posted my latest which comments heavily on this. Usually, we are high and dry at this time. Keep your umbrella handy.
Good morning, Al…
I just put up a post about some of your site-specific bottle sculptures. Hope that’s OK. Thanks.
-Randy
http://beachpackagingdesign.com/boxvox/4-site-specific-bottle-sculptures-by-albertus-gorman
No problem, thanks for sharing. Made a new piece yesterday, but have not posted that one yet. Very hot, humid, and muddy by the river. It has been a wet summer. Oh, found two plastic lemon juice bottles yesterday!