A Billboard.....A Dilemma


8:00 a.m., 17 degrees

I have my own billboard. With my art on it! It’s not something I ever thought of having. It’s not something I sought out. But an opportunity was presented to me and it caused a lot of soul searching. Why, you might ask. Well, first let me tell you how it came about:
Adams Outdoor approached the Arts Council of Greater Lansing last summer with an idea that had worked very well in Pennsylvania. Use un-sold billboards to promote art and artists. What a great idea! There minimal cost for the Arts Council and the artists. The ACGL approached their recent grantees with the idea and 6 of us chose to do it.

Now let me take you on my journey to get me to the point where I would say yes.

I grew up in the 1960’s and 70’s. So much was happening politically at that time. People were divided on every issue imaginable. If I could be really simplistic (because I can’t and won’t spend the time getting into it all!) I would just say that people were either rock solid about doing things the way ”it” had always been done (whatever “it” was) or they were rock solid about not doing “it” in the same, established manner. Let me focus on pollution.

For too long people had viewed the planet as their own personal waste can. Air pollution was awful, water pollution was awful. Litter – oh, don’t get me started! – was everywhere. Everywhere! No one thought once, let alone twice about dropping whatever they wanted to get rid of on the ground. Tissue, newspaper, cigarette butts, cups, cans, bottles, couches, tires…………you get the idea. No one cared. Well, finally someone – a lot of someone’s – did. Laws were passed, recycling started, Earth Day happened (April 22! http://www.earthday.org/earth-day-2011 A Billion Acts of Green!).

Ever heard of “Visual Pollution”? Litter on a stick? Highway junk mail? That was what billboards were called. They were everywhere. Every kind and size. No zoning, didn’t matter what it blocked, how close together they were. They were one right after another all over the place. And if they fell down, well, it became litter like all the rest. Then along came The Highway Beautification Act of 1965 (and it’s many, many amendments since then),a campaign started by Lady Bird and President Lyndon B. Johnson.

According to http://www.pbs.org/ladybird/shattereddreams/shattereddreams_report.html
“Lady Bird and her husband had driven many times from their home in Texas to Washington, DC, and had been frustrated by the increasing number of junkyards and billboards along the way. In his State of the Union address in 1965, President Johnson addressed the issue by saying "a new and substantial effort must be made to landscape highways to provide places of relaxation and recreation wherever our roads run."
The interstate highway system was built largely during the Eisenhower administration, and the billboard industry had been booming ever since. In 1958, Congress had passed a highway bill that gave states an extra half percent in funding if they controlled billboards, but the incentive appeared ineffectual in stopping highways from being blanketed with billboards.
Lady Bird wanted the highways clear of billboards and junkyards, and filled with green landscaping and wildflowers.
"Public feeling is going to bring about regulation," she told reporters, "so you don't have a solid diet of billboards on all the roads."
The power of the billboard industry, however, was a tough match for the White House and the battle to pass the Highway Beautification Act was fierce.
The eventual bill was a compromise between the White House and the Outdoor Advertising Association of America. It stated that billboards would be banned "except in those areas of commercial and industrial use." Further pressure from the industry caused an additional amendment that required the government to provide "just compensation" to owners for losing their billboards.”


The magnitude of illegal and nonconforming sign removals under the HBA of 1965 was first identified in the 1966 nationwide inventory conducted by the Bureau of Public Roads. From the list of the 1.1 million outdoor advertising signs on state inventories, nearly 840,000 were found to be illegal or nonconforming and 260,000 were located in commercial and industrial areas (conforming signs). Can you imagine? 1.1 MILLION billboards and 840,000 were illegal or nonconforming!

Fast forward to today. I grew up with all that. I remember all that! It's why I am a conservationist, a passionate proponent of nature and preservation of wilderness. My artwork is of the beauty of natural areas. What am I doing even thinking about putting it on a billboard? My conservation organization memberships will be revoked! They will disown me!

But, I’m also an artist. Funding and support for the arts are so low as to be almost non-existent. The Arts Council that gave me a grant to produce artwork promoting the beauty and conservation of our waterways was asking me to help promote them and promote art on a billboard.

And so after a lot of heartfelt, purposeful thought, I agreed. The piece I chose was also purposeful. Stones Unturned. When I wrote about that piece I said that sometimes opportunities are presented to us in the pursuit of success but we don’t have to take them. We can leave those “stones unturned”.
But, sometimes we do have to take the opportunity. This time I took the opportunity.
Sometimes, well, I guess Lady Bird said it better than I can:

"Ugliness is so grim," Lady Bird Johnson once said. "A little beauty, something that is lovely, I think, can help create harmony which will lessen tensions."

I hope people think it is lovely. I hope it will make people smile and seek out beautiful places. I hope people will be thankful for those beautiful places. I am. And I'm thankful for the opportunity.

Going to Japan

Many of you know that I had planned to go to the 1st International Moku Hanga Conference in Kyoto, Japan this June. And many of you have asked me if I am still going because of the earthquake, tsunami and radiation.
The short answer is, absolutely!
I have heard from several people living there that they are fine, the area is unaffected and there is nothing to worry about there. The Conference is still going ahead as planned, according to the home office.
One person told me that it would be like deciding not to go to Michigan when the disaster was in California.
I think now more than ever it is right to go. Sometimes, just showing up, even if you don't know the right thing to say, is the right thing to do after a traumatic incident. So, I'm showing up.

A note about donations toward relief efforts....I am making a special print and 100% of purchases will go toward those efforts. Stay tuned for what and how much! And thank you in advance for your support.

The Prints: 12 Views of the Shiawassee River


Tangled Water
The Shiawassee River has it's beginning in the twisted and chaotic waters of Shiawassee in North Oakland County. A conservation easement owned by North Oakland Headwaters Land Conservancy protects this headwaters from further development and pollution. Teeming with life under the surface and supporting wildlife and birds, the headwaters is exquisite in it's primitive & untamed state.


Meadow Quench
Davisburg hosts this wet meadow created when a prescribed burn cleared brush and released the seeds of native plants to once again color the landscape. Beautiful!


Afternoon Stillness
An area protected by the Michigan Nature Association known as a fen, this is a special and rare wetland in Michigan. Rather like a bog, the alkaline environment created by groundwater supports many rare plants. Flooding during heavy rains reflects tamarack trees not found in other sections of the river.


Quiet Reflection
Towns along the river have creatively and beautifully established parks. In Fenton, you almost feel like you are up north with the cedar trees reflected as the icy water gently flows north.


Winter Thaw
Farm land and swampy wetlands meet as the Shiawassee snakes and curls in and out of urban areas. Birds feed off rosehips and other berries that cling in this winter pantry.



Seasonal Fashion

Villages, towns and cities, like Owosso, grew up along this river as they do along every river. This is where I lived along it's banks. Now a trail begins here, near Curwood Castle, and continues on to McCurdy Park in Corunna. It passes beneath plum blossoms in the spring, under bridges, through neighborhoods and finally into deep ancient woods.


True Colors
The Getman family farmed this area for almost 100 years until giving Green Meadows Farms to the city of Owosso for a park. Harmon Patridge Park, known by locals as Green Meadows, has accessible trails, pavilions, beautiful shade trees and low banks great for fishing. With the tannins of oak trees creating a rainbow of khaki, here we can see the real color of the Shiawassee.


Autumn Richness
At mid-point along the Shiawassee, we begin seeing the land rise as glaciers left their trail. One side of the riverbank will be low and the other high creating spectacular views in all seasons, but especially, autumn.



From the River Bank

As the river flows north it carved into the gravelly hills left by glaciers 10,000 years ago leaving wonderful views for those in kayaks and canoes and for those looking down from the banks to the reflections below.


Tumbling Cascade
A century-old, failing dam was replaced by this beautiful riffle created by ledges of rocks and boulders. It opened up approximately 70 miles of river for the first time in a 100 years for fish to once again swim upstream to spawn. I can only imagine how this will help restore health to the river!


Deep Refuge
Wondering if we had suddenly transported to the bayous of Louisiana, we find ourselves at the Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge's Ferguson Bayou. It is so lush and mossy and fertile and organic. It seems the very beginning of life could have happened in this Eden of lush richness.


Fly Up at Dawn
The Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge is a mecca in spring and fall migrations wildfowl. Walking out to the Grefe Pool before dawn and waiting in the stillness for....what? We weren't even sure anything was there. At the break of first light an EXPLOSION, unlike anything we have ever heard, resounded through the air as thousands and thousands of birds took flight.

Art & the Environment Exhibit at Interlochen



Interlochen - what a beautiful place. Founded in 1928 as a summer arts camp for high school age, it is now a year round international arts academy with 500+ students. Many of the buildings are from the CCC era - gorgeous stone buildings! Learn more at www.interlochen.org.

The exhibit opened in the stunning Dow Visual Art Center on Saturday evening, Dec. 4 and runs through Jan. 22, 2011. It was a very chilly evening (25F) with snow in the forecast but it was warm and inviting inside. All the artwork was imaginative, visually complex and exciting.


Below are pictures from the Artist Reception.

12 Views of the Shiawassee River prints. It was the first time I had seen them hanging together in a gallery and not just taped to my living room wall! I was so proud of what I had accomplished! I hope this exhibit will inspire others to explore their environments and help conserve, preserve and enjoy what we've been entrusted with.



More of the Shiawassee River Prints


One of Jino Park's ink on wood pieces. Incredible detail!!!


Me in front of Eric Hansen's work. His river! (Go river people!!)


Jill Parisi world! These intaglio installations were mounted so that they moved with the air currents - coming alive like a new biological species floating in the wind. Each individual piece was different from the next yet together they created a community - rich and vibrant!



Local printmaker, Dorothy Anderson Grow and exhibitor, Jill Parisi from upstate New York.


Family and Friends. I was blessed to have so many supportive and important people in my life here!

Springfield Library Exhibit


"Tangled Water"
The headwaters of the Shiawassee River at Shiawassee Lake.

12 Views of the Shiawassee River is being shown at the Springfield Township Library from Dec. 1, 2010 - January 19, 2011. They are set up along the windows that overlook the Shiawassee Basin Preserve.

Springfield Township Library
12000 Davisburg Road
Davisburg, MI 48350
http://www.springfield.lib.mi.us/adult.htm

12 Views of the Shiawassee River - Completed!!!

After over 2 years of following the Shiawassee, gathering imagery in each season and thru all the communities and rural back-roads along the river, carving about 135 wood blocks and printing 175 prints by hand, the series is finished.

The journey of the river doesn't stop with the completion of the prints. On November 21 I showed the series to friends, volunteers and supporters of North Oakland Headwaters Land Conservancy at the Fenton Winery and Brewery.



Their response and appreciation of these prints showing the beauty of the river was overwhelming. They know the river. They clean the river. They protect the river and it's watershed. They give of their time and money "to conserving and enhancing the natural water and land resources in Northwest Oakland County through acquisition and/or preservation of key properties is essential to sustaining a high quality of life for present and future generations" and have the "intent of conserving the woods, fields, streams, wetlands and other natural features in the headwaters areas of the Clinton, Shiawassee, Huron, and Flint rivers."



Visit their website to learn more about North Oakland Headwaters Land Conservancy:

30th Annual Statewide Print Competition


This past weekend marked the opening of the Alma College 30th Annual Statewide Print Competition. It also marked the end of this competition for Michigan printmakers. With declining entries cited as the main reason Sandra Lopez-Isnardi, the show's Director, said, "An aging population of printmakers who no longer print, the passing on of many older printers, and so many high schools and colleges who no longer teach printmaking and have sold off their studio equipment, it was better to end on a high note."

Sandra Lopez-Isnardi and Marjorie Devon


And it was a high note, in my opinion. Juror, Marjorie Devon, Director of Tamarind Institute in Albuquerque, NM giving a fascinating lecture about Tamarind and their history and mission of collaborative lithography and chose some exciting and "experimental" prints for awards.


John Bergmeier of Pontiac, award winner, with his 2 entries, When We Pray (do we just close our eyes?) and A Man Reaps What He Sows. www.johnbergmeier.com



With Marjorie in front of my print, Tangled Water.


Marjorie and Sandra remain excited and optimistic about the future of printmaking. The trend toward digital prints, they believe, will swing back to the art of traditional printmaking. Music to my ears!

Read more about the show here:
http://www.alma.edu/news/releases/archives/2010/10/25/print_show