Showing posts with label Santa Fe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Santa Fe. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2016

SeedBroadcasting from Tierra Viva: Farming the Living Earth


SeedBroadcast will be honoring Seeds during Tierra Viva: Farming the Living Earth, 2016 Biodynamic Conference.

The Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station invites local seeds, seed keepers, gardeners, farmers, and inspiring seeds, as well as all Biodynamic Conference attendees to join in celebrating Seed Stories and Swapping Seeds. Come by to record your Seed Story, drop off some seeds, and pick some up too. We will have lots of seed saving how-to’s to distribute and we hope to bring people together to share their wisdom and inspiration of Seeds.

We will be parked in front of the Santa Fe Conference Center and there is no cost to participate in this SeedBroadcast event.

Santa Fe, New Mexico
Saturday, November 19
800am – 600pm: Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station
800pm – 930pm: Seed Exchange

Here is more information about SeedBroadcast and the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station:


Saturday, June 11, 2016

SWAP at EcoZoic Era: plant|seed|soil


SeedBroadcast is honored to be included in the exhibition The Ecozoic Era: plant|seed|soil from April 29 – August 5, 2016 where we are presenting the project SWAP, a hands-on Seed Story germination grow-kit. SWAP, along with the rest of the exhibition, is located inside the New Mexico State Capital Roundhouse in Santa Fe, New Mexico. This is the perfect site to declare seeds as open-source, non-proprietary bodies and beings who participate in the social and environmental well-being of everyone in our communities. It is also the perfect site for individuals to declare through action, their right to save and share seeds and disrupt the corporate domination of seed, food, agri-Culture, and politics of the few over the many.


SWAP is a pop-up, Seed Story grow-kit where visitors can participate in connecting with seeds and honoring their stories through drawing, reading, conversation, and of course swapping seeds. One can also sit down and listen to Seed Stories on headphones. SeedBroadcast is actively using this space as an ongoing recording studio through the rest of the exhibition to record Seed Stories from all participating artists and local residents.


We are encouraging local folks in Santa Fe to bring open-pollinated seeds to SWAP and pick up seeds to take home and grow. Seeds can be dropped off at SWAP, deposited in one of the many envelopes and jars, and labeled with the seed name. You might even want to add a little Seed Story into the jar so your seeds will have relations to share with whoever takes them home. When picking up seed, take only what you can use and be sure to leave plenty for others. There are empty packets to transfer your seed into.

The table and bulletin board are set up for drawing Seed Stories and posting these along with community Seed information on the tack board. SeedBroadcast agri-Culture Journals are also available for your seedy reading pleasure.


So far thousands of seeds have made their way into the Roundhouse and New Mexico’s political center to take a seat and wield their perfect power of nourishment, wisdom, and generosity. As many will agree, these characteristics are really the roots of radical action today. Seeds are our guides, teaching us how to save seeds, grow food, support healthy community, and share this wealth with others.


Thanks go out to all the seed keepers who brought seeds to share for the opening reception and who continue to bring seeds to be included in SWAP for the duration of the exhibition. We hope this project will encourage Santa Fe to organize a year round seed swap, seed library, or whatever might yet be imagined to share seed.


Here are some Seed Stories recorded at SWAP... with more to come!

Bobbe Besold shares her Seed Story at the Ecozoic Era: plant|seed|soil art exhibition
https://soundcloud.com/seedbroadcast/bobbe-shares-her-seed-story-at-the-ecozoic-era-plantseedsoil-art-exhibition


Marion Wasserman tells a Seed Story about life long relationships with seed
https://soundcloud.com/seedbroadcast/marion-wasserman-tells-a-seed-story-about-life-long-relationships-with-seed


Exhibition detail

We would also like to honor the incredible work in the exhibition encompassing both human and the more-than-human love of land, plant, seed, soil, compost, and more. Here is a list of all the artists involved. And as many of these artists point out on their wall labels, there are many more project partners who made all this work possible, both human and other.

Margaret Bagshaw
Bobbe Besold
Matthew Chase-Daniel
Helen Hardin
Jeanette Hart-Mann
Basia Irland
Courtney M Leonard
Jade Leyva
Amy Lin
Sarah Molina
Sabra Moore
Larry Ogan
Ruben Olguin
Chrissie Orr
Halley Roberts
Ahní Rocheleau
Gabriela Silva
Penny Spring
Nancy Sutor
Rulan Tangen
Pablita Velarde
Marion Wasserman
Jerry Wellman
Rick Yoshimoto

Bobbe Besold is not only an artist in the show, she is also the curator and organizer. The exhibition’s title The Ecozoic Era: plant|seed|soil is informed by the following statement:

“Ecozoic: “eco-“ is derived from the Greek work “oikos” meaning house, household, or home, and “-zoic” from the Greek word “zoikos” meaning pertaining to living beings. The House of Livings Beings. We are all, all of us, living in the same house.”

“This biological term was created by the philosopher, geologian, Earth scholar, Thomas Berry.”

Bobbe Besold, Seed Blocks: for building or for gambling

Jade Leyva, Maíz Azúl

Exhibition detail

Penny Spring, Seeds, Stems, Roots and Shoots, fabric collage

Gabriela Silva, Growing Paper
New Mexico True Blue Corn
New Mexico True Pink Corn
New Mexico Black Beans
New Mexico Pinto Beans
New Mexico Snow Peas
The Three Sisters
handmade paper and seeds
Exhibition detail

Sabra Moore, H/EAR//HER/E

The Ecozoic Era: plant|seed|soil exhibition was sponsored by El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe, The NM Capital Art Foundation, the McCune Foundation and dRoberts Realty.

Monday, May 2, 2016

Seed Swap at Ecozoic Era: Friday May 6th




SeedBroadcast SWAP

Ecozoic Era: Plant| Seed|Soil| opens at the New Mexico State Capital
 Friday May 6th from 4pm to 6pm.
Curated by Bobbe Besold with artists:
Margaret Bagshaw, Bobbe Besold, Matthew Chase-Daniel, Helen Hardin, Jeanette Hart-Mann, Basia Irland, Courtney M Leonard, Jade Leyba, Amy Lin, Sarah Molina, Sabra Moore, Larry Ogan, Ruben Olguin, Chrissie Orr, Hayley Roberts, Ahni Rocheleau, SeedBroadcast, Gabriela Silva, Penny Spring, Nancy Sutor, Rulan Tangen, Pablita Velarde, Marion Wasserman, Jerry Wellman, Rick Yoshimoto

Come on by and bring seeds and stories to SWAP.  Join in the radical seed action in the heart of the State Capital to keep our traditional land race seeds free and in the hands of the people that believe in their true spirit.   The Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station will be there and we can record and share that precious seed story.....  Seeds and Stories keep that culture in agi -Culture!






Sunday, May 1, 2016

SWAP and the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station at the New Mexico State Capital


SeedBroadcast is participating in the exhibition The Ecozoic Era: Plant|Seed|Soil with SWAP and the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station at the New Mexico State Capital
April 29 - August 5, 2016

Location: New Mexico State Capital Building at the corner of Old Santa Fe Trail and Paseo De Peralta, Santa Fe, New Mexico

SWAP is a traveling Seed Story pollination pop-up and mini seed library. This experimental “grow kit” will enable the cultivation of radical rooted seed action at the New Mexico State Capital. Bring seeds to swap, pick-up seeds to grow, post local food and seed sovereignty news on the SWAP bulletin board, listen, draw, and record Seed Stories!

The Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station will also be there at the Opening Reception on Friday, May 6 from 4-6pm.

Join us to celebrate local seeds and their stories!


Saturday, March 26, 2016

Santa Fe Seed Exchange

Sunflower Seeds
Every year, as our apricot trees begin to blossom and the trees get that green tinge, seed exchanges spring up all over New Mexico.  They are held in small community centers, libraries, and parking lots in the rural areas such as Mora and Anton Chico to the urban landscapes of Albuquerque and Santa Fe. It seems that seeds have a way of attracting people who grow their own food in urban backyards as well as the farmer and commercial grower.  The Santa Fe Seed Exchange is a more urban exchange with backyard gardeners bringing their small stashes of seeds.
This exchange is organized by Home Grown New Mexico and the City of Santa Fe Parks Division.   Jannine Cabossel  is at the helm of this endeavor, she is a master gardener who grows heirloom tomatoes and is known for her giant pumpkins and vegetables. She calls herself an "artisan farmer" as she loves to create beauty in her garden by combining art, flowers and her unusually large vegetables. This is SeedBroadcast's third year at this community driven seed event and it was a delight to meet up with people that we met the year before while searching the tables for that new variety of seed. We even discovered a new batch of seeds that we had given away last year, our Anton Chico Hopi Flint Red Corn. Someone had taken them home, grown them out, saved them and returned a brown envelop full of the new seeds to be redistributed.   Keeping our seeds growing and adapting to the local environment and the changing weather patterns is vital to the resilience of our local food sovereignty.


Anton Chico Hopi Flint Red Corn
Bean table
 The Santa Fe Seed exchange is held in the barn at Frenchy's Field  a well known and beloved park that straddles the Santa Fe River.  As people arrived with their seeds to share they were directed to tables that were arranged so seeds could be placed in their rightful category, such as flowers, squash, tomatoes..... this makes it easy to rummage for that favorite seed.  The Santa Fe Master Gardeners were on hand to answer any questions and had diligently made hundreds of seed balls to give away.

Master Gardener Seed balls
Xenia with her giant pumpkin seeds
 SeedBroadcast parked the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station at the entrance to the park where we exchanged stories and seeds with seed-lovers from all walks of life.



 Jason Jaramillo, the program coordinator for the Santa Fe Railyard Park Stewards stopped by looking for seeds to plant in the traditional waffle garden and he shared this story with us:
Jason Jaramillo


Also Tamara Kukuczka  who is planning a permaculture project on a piece of land that she has in Panama shared this story:

 One of our last visitors that  breezy mid-March evening was Brad Jones a natural story-teller. He captivated us with his tales of Frenchy's Field and the antics he got up to when he worked for the rail road.  He reminded us of how at the end of the summer the park would be covered in yellow and purple wild flowers. Each year bursting forth with a new look sometimes more yellow sometimes more purple. With a huge smile he left us with his story of how he would love to scatter new seeds around the park!
So what might next year look like?  How might we expand the small community garden plot and scatter some food producing seeds through out the park..... what might happen then?

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Seeds and Some Earth at the IAIA Student Leadership Summit


On February 25th SeedBroadcast and the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station partnered up with the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) for their Student Leadership Summit. It was a day filled with workshops, tours, and presentations meant to spark the stories and actions of empowerment at IAIA.

During this event the newest member of the SeedBroadcast collective, Ruben Olguin, presented his workshop on making “puddle” seed pots out of the Sandia red clay he recently harvested. Ruben is a New Mexico based artist working in earth materials and electronic media. His work draws from his mixed Pueblo and Spanish heritage. His sculptures incorporate traditional/hand processes and incorporate sound and electronic elements. Ruben says, “My practice focuses spending as much time in the desert as in the computer lab.” Ruben has exhibited internationally and his full-dome video work has been seen in Jenna, Germany, Miami, Fl, Santa Fe, NM, and Albuquerque, NM. He has exhibited earth sculpted sound and video installations in Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Taos, and Marfa, TX. His practice involves community outreach, developing local connections, and teaching STEM-Arts workshops for k-8 grades incorporating land and habitat elements. Olguin achieved his MFA from The University of New Mexico Department of Art and Art History in electronic arts, and holds a B.A. in cinematic art. His goals are to make and teach new media art along with socially engaged art practices. We welcome Ruben as a SeedBroadcaster!


As each group of students came by the Station, Ruben discussed the history of seed pots and their working genius. He then talked about different processes for making these. Students and visitors alike volunteered to jump into the mud with him and build a little seed pot to take home. These were then air-dried until rigid enough to move.


It is no wonder that so many cultures around the world made seed pots to store their seeds in. Clay is a superior material for seed storage. The clay keeps the seeds out of light, stabilizes the temperature, wicks away moisture, and keeps rodents and bugs at bay. It is literally a protective body holding the seed and keeping its earthy dreams alive until the day comes when it is buried, transformed, and gives its passage to set roots and create life again. The seed pots are beautiful, heavy, balanced, and imperfectly perfect with fingerprints molded inside and out.

The IAIA community explored the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station and found seeds to take home. One young lady was trying hard to find a regional corn that was short season, hardy, and tolerant of everything a dry, rocky, too cold/too hot home could nurture. Luckily we still had some Millennium Corn from seed saver Bevin Williams up near Cortez. It seemed like the perfect fit. She was so excited and grateful that these seeds were being shared with nothing more than an honest word of thanks and pass it on. Thank you!

We also met Daniel McCoy Jr who is a student at IAIA and determined to finish school and get back to his roots in Oklahoma where he can share a love of the simple, resilient life of farming and gardening with his family. He shared his story with us. Listen here:
https://soundcloud.com/seedbroadcast/daniel-mccoy-jr-shares-a-story-about-growing-up-on-a-farm-in-oklahoma




IAIA is an arts institution based in Santa Fe, New Mexico devoted to Native American and Alaskan Native Arts education. Students attend from around the country with the majority coming from many of the 562 federally recognized tribes creating a truly multi-cultural space of learning. What also makes IAIA unique as an educational site is its emphasis on connections between the depth of cultures past, present, and future while emphasizing well-being, sustainability, and the land which bring this community together in creativity and strength. This is part of the IAIA Center for Lifelong Education (CLE).


As part of this programming the CLE facilitates a community garden, greenhouse, and raised-bed low tunnels, encouraging students to be involved and bring their skills and efforts to helping make local food and health a part of their everyday. From the latest technology in season extrenders to traditional waffle gardens and terraces, the community at IAIA experiments with growing food and growing a deep cultural knowledge of life based in land, plants, seed, food, language, and culture.






Monday, July 13, 2015

Food Justice Celebration at Santa Fe Art Institute

“The interpretations of food justice can be complex and nuanced, but the concept is simple and direct: justice for all in the food system, whether producers, farmworkers, processors, workers, eaters, or communities. Integral to food justice is also respect for the systems that support how and where the food is grown— an ethic of place regarding the land, the air, the water, the planet, the animals and the environment. The groups that embrace food justice vary in agendas, constituencies and focus, but all share a commitment to the definition we originally provided: to achieve equality and fairness in relation to food system impacts and a different more just and sustainable way for food to be grown, produced, made accessible and eaten.” 
  From Food Justice by Robert Gottlieb and Anupama Joshi
The sharing of food and ideas.

This past year the Santa Fe Art Institute with the guidance of director Sanjit Sethi has brought it's artist-residency program into a deep inquiry into the notion of Food Justice. This was the first in a planned annual theme-based residency program and it brought over forty artists, from all over the world, together with local activists, farmers and lovers of home grown food to creatively investigate the idea of Food Justice as it relates to New Mexico.

 “ From July 2014 through June 2015, SFAI encourages creative minds to come together and examine the territory of food justice. Together, we will ask how can we use diverse creative practices to confront inherent social, cultural and economic problems in our food system? Further, how can we bring together insights from creative fields, environmental sciences, sustainable agriculture, critical theory, and food studies to have local, national, and international impact?” 


Alexis Elton and Brett Ellison of Jubilee farms with SeedBroadcaster Chloe
When Sanjit first came to Santa Fe he reached out to the community to explore what might be a fitting theme to kick off this initiative. The economic disparities, the lack of water and access to land, the difficulties for our native  communities to have adequate access to fresh food and the food desert of Cerrillos Road were issues many locals talked about. However there are also the long-standing traditional agricultural practices that are still tightly held in Northern New Mexico. It was this juxtaposition that Sanjit felt could be explored so the Food Justice theme emerged.
Desert by Street Food Institute.
The artists were selected through an application process where they were asked to create a proposal that would address food inadequacies in New Mexico and how they might engage with community partners. It was a rigorous selection process based on the impact of the proposal as much as the individual artistic practice. As part of this theme-based year SFAI partnered with the communities along the Española Valley and many of the artists-in-resident’s created projects in collaboration with those communities. They worked closely with cultural advisers such as Roger Montoya and Todd Lopez. Artists such as Holly Schmidt, Christie Green, Yoko Inoue, and Alexis Elton created projects with students at the La Tierra Montessori School that animated discussions and actions that were far reaching into the community at large.
Installation by Christie Green addressing issues of accessibility to healthy food

 On June 20th SFAI held a celebration and culminating event to highlight the creative projects that have emerged through out this year. The community was invited to a free lunch catered by Street Food Institute. SFI works with young adults and emerging culinary students and practitioners to develop the business and technical skills to realize their entrepreneurial dreams. The students begin with hands-on training at SFI Food Trucks, where they learn how to make delicious and healthy food using sustainable business practices. The event featured artists, open studios, organizations and workshops by:
 SeedBroadcast with Grow
Alexis Elton 
Christie Green Radicle
Rodrigo Guzmán de San Martín 
Hakim Bellamy 
Jessica Frelinghuysen 
Erik Banjamins
FICTILIS:Andrea Steves & Timothy Furstnau 
Marie Dorsey 
Tina Rapp
Hye Young Kim Currents New Media Fellow
Amy Malbeouf Canada Council for the Arts Fellow



UN|silo|ED Hub at Santa Fe Art Institute
 The SeedBroadcast UN|silo|ED hub was active with our food justice soundscape, a mapping of various food justice projects, including the Grow Your Own Story installation created by students from Catherine Harris’s class in the Arts and Ecology department at the University of New Mexico, interactive work station and seed exchange.

“Working together as a class and in collaboration with SeedBroadcast has been a wonderful experience! Grow has been both a gratifying and challenging project. We are honored to have made such a positive impact on our communities in Albuquerque at UNM and Barcelona Elementary and in Santa Fe at the Santa Fe Art Institute and Monte Del Sol Charter School. Thank you to everyone who took time to participate and allow us to GROW their story. Even bigger thanks to SeedBroadcast for sharing your space and giving us a platform for Grow!” 
Catherine Harris' Intermediate Art and Ecology Class of Spring 2015 
The Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station was parked at the entrance of the building to broadcast seed stories, loud and clear, around the event.

This was a time to share locally sourced food and conversation in a dignified atmosphere of mutual understanding and concerns over the contemporary state of our agricultural practices the inadequacies of access to healthy food. We shared stories and concerns; we discussed each others projects, and made commitments to keep this theme alive and vibrant in the optimist hope of eventually making change.

 The following are some thoughts on Food Justice from the SFAI residents:
Listen to Alexis Elton 
Listen to Yoko Inoue
Listen to Nikki Pike

Saturday, June 13, 2015

SeedBroadcasting at Lunch@SFAI

We will be SeedBroadcasting with the Mobile Seed Story Broadcasting Station along with presenting our |UN|silo|ED| Food Justice hub, a collection of projects by SFAI residents and others, drawing boards where you can write your own thoughts on food justice, an audio story-scape, open-pollianted seeds, and seed saving resources. Please come by and participate in this working process.

This event is open to the public, but you must rsvp!
RSVP here: http://www.eventbrite.com/e/lunch-sfai-a-celebration-of-food-justice-tickets-17086757953

 June 20th, 11AM-3PM @ SFAI, located on the SFUAD campus at 1600 St Michaels Dr, Santa Fe, New Mexico



Join the SFAI community as we celebrate the work of Food Justice @ SFAI! Connect with our gifted artists in residence, committed community partners, and fellow collaborators over lunch catered by Street Food Institute. The event will include a reception, open studios, artwork created within the Food Justice theme, & workshops with artists & organizations. Doors open at 11am and events take place until 3pm.

DETAILS: June 20th, 11AM-3PM @ SFAI, located on the SFUAD campus at 1600 St Michaels Dr, Santa Fe, New Mexico

11am-12pm Reception

12pm-130pm Lunch

130pm-3pm Workshops, Current Residents Open Studios, Information Tables

ABOUT SFAI’S FOOD JUSTICE PROGRAMMING

Starting in August 2014 SFAI brought nearly 40 artists from more than 25 countries as well as across the United States to work with local individuals and organizations dedicated to issues around Food, Food Security, and inequities in our food systems. Projects ranged from creating urban gardens to working with local farmers to collaborating on permaculture food system design. Residents led workshops with diverse communities on topics such as fair trade to seed saving to food access in prisons. Please join us in exploring their work.

OPEN STUDIO ARTISTS, ORGANIZATIONS & WORKSHOPS BY:

SeedBroadcast

Street Food Institute

Alexis Elton

Christie Green Radicle

Rodrigo Guzmán de San Martín

Hakim Bellamy

Jessica Frelinghuysen

Erik Banjamins

FICTILIS: Andrea Steves & Timothy Furstnau

Marie Dorsey

Tina Rapp

Hye Young Kim Currents New Media Fellow

Amy Malbeouf Canada Council for the Arts Fellow

Friday, June 12, 2015

Creatively Re-Storying our Seeds at |UN|silo|ED| SeedBroadcast

Drawing boards and seed swap in SeedBroadcast |UN|silo|ED hub at SFAI
One of our goals for being a part of the Santa Fe Art Institute’s Food Justice Residency program is our desire to literally unsilo the creative potential of people and seeds as they come together in a dance of interdependency to nurture one another. In this, we want to take the long view. To step back and recognize not the specifics of each piece in this puzzle, rather, to take a gander at what is in between, what is shared at the edges, and what is generated when the unexpected becomes "the between" and enacts forms of food justice.

The title of this in-process project has been |UN|silo|ED and so far it has been extraordinary as we have had the opportunity to share the incredible wealth of what we do SeedBroadcasting, as well as invite many others to jump in and contribute their own projects, processes, thoughts, and ideas at this critical moment of climate change and global/local food crisis....and we'll have more on this in an upcoming blog.

May 16th workshop with Rowen White in the SeedBroadcast |UN|silo|ED hub at SFAI

As part of our residency we decided to create an event that would bring together seed keepers, locavores, activists, performers, artists, and agri-Culture junkies to celebrate seeds through ritual. By using the word ritual we mean to acknowledgement that having a relationship with seeds, food, and each other IS about becoming deeply planted in a daily practice of knowledge and action. There can be no one without the other. We each must plant a seed, harvest its generosity, and perform this with others. This is ritual.

With this in mind on May 16th, in collaboration with Rowen White of Sierra Seeds, Rulan Tangen of Dancing Earth, and Santa Fe Art Institute, we organized an event to celebrate this seedy process. The day included a Seed Saving workshop, potluck lunch, series of performances, seed blessing, and seed swap.

Seeds and food to share

The morning workshop, led by Rowen White, brought seed people in from all over the region, from Fort Sumner, Aztec, Mancos, Truth or Consequence, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, and Santa Fe. Rowen is a Mohawk seed keeper, teacher, farmer, and writer and she brought all these together to share with the group as a space to cultivate the creative re-storying of seeds in our lives. She began where all things begin, in the seed and in her inspiration to become a seed keeper with both deep cultural ties to Mohawk traditions and a bioregional commitment to an indigenous permaculture rooted in place of the northern California mountains. Beginning with intention, her presentation took us from the personal to the political and back again, where she reminded us that “seeding the revolution” means changing the paradigm of our relationship to life through growing familial connections of reciprocity and mutual benefit to rebuild and cultivate an ethic within a living context. It is all about seeds.

Rowen White during the seed saving workshop
Seed naming game

Rowen and her incredible seed assistant, Maize (her daughter), then led the group through a naming game, where we each enjoyed holding seeds and making guesses as to their names. This game brought everyone together to look and listen with a seed geeks pleasure at all the diversity of shape, color, size, and potential. We then shifted gears and walked to the SeedBroadcast space in the Lumpkin room to shout out intentions for seeding our own revolutions. Here is the incredible list generated as we wrote these words down on the Justice board and declared our thoughts on Food Justice:

Our right as humans to have access to food that is nutritious and able to sustain a healthy life
SLOW
Return Home
ONE
Solastalgia
FOR ALL!
Education
Love
Hunter/Gatherer Instincts
Beauty
Loss of Biodiversity
Knowledge
Solidarity with our home
Bravery
Surviving
Health
Permaculture
Art of Germination
Vandana
Wellbeing
Realism
Back to our roots
Loving
Purity
Monarchy
Revolution
Nurture
Flavor
Reclaiming diversity
identity
Connection
dedication
health
empower
community
shiva
grieving
pleasure
planet
selfs
access
traditional
humanity
place
loving
food as medicine
returning home
instinct
survival
hunger
no pesticides
dedication
no Monsanto
protection
birth
earth


After a very fruitful morning discussing the origins of sustenance we had the tremendous pleasure to share the cycle of seed as a glorious bounty of nutritious, delicious, diverse, and reverently rooted food. POTLUCK! There is something very special in cooking for others and then sharing this process through the ritual tasting of life. Like so many shouted out, this is an act of love. During this time together we sat huddled in circles and spent time learning about and cherishing one another while seed dances and music filled the space.

Potluck straight from the farm...Photo by Genevieve Russell
Blessings of seed, the proof is on the plate. Photo by Genevieve Russell

This love just keeps on giving, but it does not come without reciprocity. Commitment. During the remaining time Rowen returned to the idea of what each of us has to do in order to take part in seed saving and take part in the wonderment of botanical processes. And, if you didn’t know it before, you are going to know it now, and you might blush, cause it’s all about sex and as Rowen puts it, “the kinship of plants.” But she also pointed out something crucial. It’s not just about the plants in an intertwining closed-loop of intimate desire. This process is also about us and the living context that we stimulate in our gardens and on our farms, as well as, the ever-changing environmental conditions that we have no control over. If we truly want to grow bioregionally adapted seeds and rebuild a resilient local foodshed that can take on the challenges of global climate change, then we need to be committed. Even in the smallest way, committing to one type of plant, we need commitment to do it and do it ritually year after year, reclaiming the ways of not so long ago. The results are brilliant.

Demonstration on the ease of putting your foot down and cleaning beans!

What are we swapping for these magic seeds? Time and thoughtful action… and most probably many failures and successes along the way. To really root our seeds at home and cultivate familial connections. Rowen calls this the 7th Generation. Usually we hear this term as it pertains to the future and our commitment to make decisions and act on them because they will affect our children’s children’s children. But what she is talking about is another sort of time. Not the future, rather the present past, the living past as it is growing year after year in the cycle of life preparing for the present. Every year a seed is saved and replanted it grows its own memory, which engenders it with strength, knowledge, and a desire to be at home. By the 7th generation of saving, planting, growing, and harvesting these seeds they have come home. At home in place and prepared to be a part of this particular dynamic econiche. This is where our stories merge with the stories of the seeds.

Photo by, Genevieve Russell

Stories are the creative expression of these relationships, of coming home, being rooted, struggling for survival, and cycling back again into the earthly depths of the soil. During our closing circle of the workshop Rowen taught us to sing an Anishanaabe seed song. She pointed out that many seed songs come from birth songs. They are tied to the cycles of life.

The re-storying of our relationships with seeds involve each of us in our own creative ways. There is no one story to follow, there are only stories to be grown, shared, and realized in context with life. Following this desire in the power of seeds to inspire, the day was concluded with an amazing series of creative performative responses curated by Rulan Tangen of Dancing Earth Contemporary Indigenous dance Creations. Below are images and statements from these artists, discussing some of their working concepts and processes.

Corn Maiden, performance. Photo by Nicole Davis/SFAI

CORN MAIDEN
Video Projection ( 12:49:04) with Performance by Rulan Tangen
Collaboration Marion Wasserman + Rulan Tangen © 2014

"A video and dance collaboration about the ancestry of seeds and the lineage of corn. Generations have planted these seeds providing food and nourishment in the high desert for thousands of years. Numerous rows of dancing corn have been cultivated each keeping the genetic information, the nourishment and the ritual alive. This dance and video reflects this legacy as a rhythm of life and the repetition of cycles weaving life and culture and prayer."

Tohil Fidel Brito Bernal and María Regina Firmino-Castillo. Photo by Nicole Davis/SFAI
B’eluval Aama (Ajmaq): Performative response by Tohil Fidel Brito Bernal and María Regina Firmino-Castillo
B’eluval Aama (Ajmaq): Performative response by Tohil Fidel Brito Bernal and María Regina Firmino-Castillo. Photo by Nicole Davis/SFAI

B’eluval Aama (Ajmaq)
Performative response by Tohil Fidel Brito Bernal and María Regina Firmino-Castillo

"B’eluval Aama is the name of the day in the Ixil Maya ritual calendar: B’eluval (9) is the number of the day, and Aama is the name of the energy (yooxhil; tichiil) that corresponds to the day. It is a propitious day to reflect on one’s responsibility for wrongs committed against one’s family, community, and the Earth and the various entities with in it with which one must live in rec- iprocity and mutual care and respect. The action was enacted with this in mind. It was an op- portunity for us — performers and “audience” — to reflect on our relative levels of complicity and responsibility for the destruction of ancestral maize and the often simultaneous genocide of peoples of maize; in other words: indigenous communities from South, Central, and North Amer- ica who have cultivated maize for millennia."

"An important element in the performative action was a round mirror upon which the Mayan glyph representing the day Aama was drawn. Holding this mirror, Tohil, through the Aama in- scribed in the mirror, saluted the 6 directions (each cardinal direction, plus Earth and Sky). Tohil greeted each of these directions in Ixil Maya while María performed movements which both re- flected and embodied the characteristics of each direction."

"Tohil then turned to the South, the cardinal direction associated with the day Aama, and recited an invocation of the day in Ixil. Then María, turning to the South, read aloud translations of the invocation in Spanish and English before giving Tohil the text she read from."

"The following part of the performative action consisted of María reciting 13 names of genetically modified corn, one by one, while presenting the mirror before the faces of audience members. Audience members face the mirror with the glyph Aama, taking a moment to reflect on their re- sponsibility in the face of the disaster represented by the biotech industry. They also see their faces transformed by the glyph; the day’s yooxhil and their own yooxhil merge, as it were, in the performative moment of encounter."

"After an audience member gazed into the mirror, Tohil approached, reciting a name of maize in an Indigenous language, and offering ancestral seeds to the audience member. He repeated this action 13 times, reciting 13 Indigenous names of maize in response to each GMO corn that María named."

After these actions, María fixes her gaze onto the mirror. With a macaw feather, Tohil interrupts her gaze and they rise up together. Tohil cleans the mirror with the macaw feather while María recites a text written by Jakaltek Mayan poet and anthropologist Victor Montejo during Guatemala’s genocidal war:"

“a pesar de que se intente olvidar sus nombres
poco a poco,
yo sé que flores silvestres siguen brotando diariamente de sus huesos clandestinos,”
alla en barrancos y montanas.”

“Even though they try to make us forget their names, little by little,
I know that wildflowers
continue to grow from their clandestine bones over there, in the mountains and gorges.”

The mirror is then gifted to Seed Saver Rowen White for the work she conducts to preserve the vitality of ancestral seeds and our peoples…."


Molly Rose and Karina Wilson, honoring the water
Trey Pickett
Molly Rose and Suzanne Teng,
microbial growth/embracing the mystery/northern energy,
with recitation of "In the Beginning", a Poem by Jahan Khalighi
Israel Fransisco Haros Lopez
Echo Gustafsen
Cami Leonard, SEED, an interactive installation

At the very end of these performances, Madi Sato led all in a seed blessing, singing an ancient Japanese Seed Song as we gathered in two concentric patterns circling left and right and dancing together to honor seeds. After this the seed swap began!


Seed Swap. Photo by Nicole Davis/SFAI
Seed Swap. Photo by Nicole Davis/SFAI

We would like to thank everyone who came out to join us for this amazing day celebrating seed and also thank Rowen, Rulan, and all the performers. We would also like to thank Santa Fe Art Institute, McCune Charitable Foundation, and every anonymous donor who made this logistically possible.