rotundifolia
Rotundifolia open air studio Shinnecock Hills
Rolled Smilax Rotundifolia Stems and Roots, Sonia
6’ x 6’ x 9.5” January 15 2020
above, close-up Smilax Rotundifolia Stems
"This we know: the Earth does not belong to man, man belongs to the Earth. All things are connected like the blood that unites us all. Man did not weave the web of life, he is but a strand in it. Whatever he does to the web he does to himself ".
Chief Seattle (recorded in 1852), leader of the Suquamish and Duwamish Native American tribes in what is now the U.S. State of Washington.
The date of the first known travel-related case of the novel coronavirus entering the United States as a three-week outbreak of Fowl Pox suffered by almost half of Shinnecock Family Flock - concluded.
“Protecting nature is vital to escape 'era of pandemics” (Note 1).
Miss Jane B. Colt’s gardens vanished long ago into an overgrowth of the native woody vine Smilax Rotundifolia. The stems, armed with sharp thorns (pictured), attach spiral shaped tendrils to neighboring plants for support. The roots were pulled from the ground by hand, compacted, and rolled. To provide open space and light and air for the possibility of her plants to re-emerge from the ground (spring 2020).
Note 1: report composed by IPBES Workshop on BioDiversity and Pandemics