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Jean Ann Eisenhower

~ Author, Artist, Activist, Consultant

Jean Ann Eisenhower

Category Archives: artwork

Building an Adobe Tree

27 Tuesday Oct 2015

Posted by Jean Eisenhower in adobe sculpture, artwork, natural plaster sculpture

≈ Leave a comment

canelo projectThere’s a rare and wonderful tribe of individuals practicing “natural plaster artistry” – raising the ancient skill of adobe building to new and even fantastical heights!

I learned the craft from Bill Steen at the Canelo Project (logo to the right) in southern Arizona, back in 2006, just before moving to Silver City.

And I hired Gavio [no last name] of Sebastopol, California, to help me implement a design in my home under renovation.  As soon as I began removing walls, I discovered my home had 9″ deep buttresses in every corner and every nine feet along the walls that had been hidden behind drywall.  These not only robbed my home of valuable space, but ruined the passive solar potential* of this home – unless I could find a way to incorporate those buttresses in my design.

The photo below shows part of a buttress sticking out from the corner, mostly hidden by the cream-colored drywall on the right, with the concrete wall painted green on the left.

tree beginningThis is Gavio, beginning the first adobe sculptural tree in my home.  Notice I’ve brought down electricity for my inspirational contribution – a lighted “moon” fixture.

tree branches 3I have no idea what he’s designing, so I hold my breath.  On the other hand, I’ve seen photos of his work, which I like very much, so I hope and pray.  I like very much the branch he’s installing that will cross in front of the moon!

He uses a variety of hardware to attach to the old concrete.

(The original green wall has been painted with a mix of Elmer’s Glue, sand, and water to help the future adobe stick to it.)

tree base 4

Here’s the base, where you can see we used all sorts of random scrap debris to hold things together, fill in the space so we don’t use more adobe than we need, and to have a rough surface to apply to.  We used scraps of chicken wire, hardware cloth, lumber, rope and more – whatever was around, rough-textured, and malleable.

tree mudded 5I’m still g0ing on faith here, as we begin adding “rough plaster” from the wheelbarrow. Looks rather ugly to me.

I’m still really not sure about this, but Gavio’s in charge.

tree mudded 6Still needing faith….

tree wall moonThen we make up a batch of “finish plaster” to finish the wall, and I still worry about that tree.

wall scupture unfin

We “finish plaster” the tree and it all begins to dry – back to ugly again!

tree sculpture

I’m unsure, but keep my feelings to myself.

office fin

We paint the wall and archway with alises – two paints we made with natural earth pigments, white clay, glass sand, mica, and wheat glue.  Then Gavio finishes the tree trunk with three different glazes made of earth pigments and milk casein.  Casein paints are more transparent than alises.

I love it!  Reminds me of a gnarly old oak in an ancient forest.

~

* Above, I mentioned that the drywall “ruined the passive solar potential” of my home, which might require some explanation.  When a passive solar home gains its heat in the winter daytime, it needs to store it to last through the night – which it does in its thermal mass.  Thermal mass is anything heavy, like adobe, brick, stone, and tile, which my home had plenty of, but which must not be buried beneath elements like drywall, which would keep the heat from being absorbed.  Therefore, the drywall had to go.  (And the exterior of the house had to be insulated, but that’s another story for another time.)

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Designing a Human Ecosystem

05 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by Jean Eisenhower in artwork, Uncategorized

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Just discovered this in my draft folder, meant to be posted last summer!  Ah well.  Now’s a good time too ~

Even though I haven’t been promoting my design business (locally), I’m still delighted when folks ask me to help them with their designs.

[This blog was previously published in Desert Exposure, the award-winning local arts and entertainment monthly magazine in Silver City, New Mexico.  My article covers designing for beauty, privacy, quiet, functionality, ergonomics, economics, passive solar design, environmental responsibility, and more!)

Author Jean Eisenhower with friend Darlene Dabroslavic, partner Greg Renfro, and cat Peaches.

Author Jean Eisenhower with friend Darlene Dabroslavic, partner Greg Renfro, and cat Peaches.

Wonderful to be out in the garden again!  Sitting.

Yes, sitting.  I haven’t felt like working much yet this year.  Maybe I’m recovering from doing so very much last summer.

I often ask myself why this space nurtures me so well.  It’s not just one or a couple of things.  We’re connected to a vast Universe, all of it impacting us in different ways, as we impact our yards and gardens in different ways, all of it requiring consideration.

terracesMy neighbors have seen my yard slowly transform over the past eight years, from the solid granite hill cut with elm trees and four other major living plants, to an elm-cleared weedy lot with barren structures of fence posts, swales, and materials piles – and terraces built against the rock hill – to a cedar-fenced enclosure with a half-dozen young trees peeking above (and lots more unseen inside) with experimental plantings on the outside. It’s been a slow go.

shady terraces cropIt’s a complex process to create something not just aesthetic, but ecologically responsible, functional, productive, socially nurturing, self-nurturing, ergonomic, and economic!  It’s not something to knock out on paper in an afternoon and then hire the workers to complete next week.

Our yards are ecosystems we’re creating of uncountable living beings, all interacting.  The design task challenges our creativity and our consciousness.  The result is a harmonious gathering of living beings to share our space on quiet mornings, nurturing, inspiring, and healing.

If I could wish anything for everyone on this planet, it would be a garden that nurtures them, body, mind, and soul.

Since we each have different needs, abilities, and constraints, each of us need a unique design.  Here are some basic considerations:

Privacy and Quiet

Modern life subjects us to a lot of stimuli and has taken most of us away from the natural, living world to some degree, so it’s important for us to create at least a small natural space where we can be free of overstimulation, including social stimuli.  Fences or hedges seem essential to most people who want to spend time outdoors.

Beauty

penstemon

The most beautiful items, I assert, are found in nature:  stones, trees, flowers, and all plants.  A yard needs nothing more to create beauty.

If we need to introduce manufactured items, for instance to build a fence, the more natural the better.

Garden hoses, plastic tubs, trash cans can all be stored in a single location, maybe shielded, leaving all the rest of yard for feasting the eyes on natural colors, lines, textures, and shapes.  When we must have a manufactured item in those areas, for instance, chairs, the colors and textures should be harmonious.

DSC03486Lines in the yard needn’t be rectilinear.  Paths and fences can meander, and patios should be shaped organically to suit their function.  Rectangles have their place in modern efficiency, but we’re not packing patios into the back yard!  Often, we just have one, and it should be shaped to support the life on it and surrounding it.  What will be on and around it?  Hold that thought.

Columbines thrive next to (and hide) the plastic water container we keep full for birds - and hopefully for a little aquaculture one day!

Columbines thrive next to (and hide) the plastic water container we keep full for birds – and hopefully for a little aquaculture one day!

Color!  Who doesn’t thrill at the first spring flowers?  Flowers bring us such wonderful lessons in harmony and aesthetics in every iris, columbine, rose, garden sage spike, evening primrose, twining morning glory, and even my beloved, modest globe mallow (she’s a healer, you know).  And prickle poppies, thistles (please don’t mow them down, City!), elderberry, desert willow, fairy duster, and all the others unnamed.  And these are just the flowers that grow with almost no effort!  

Please don’t be too practical (like I used to be) and think that all the soil needs to be in vegetable production!  Allow the flowers, and then learn what they’re good for.  Dandelion, for instance, is excellent medicine.  Flowers, if we understand them and use their medicine appropriately, might even save us thousands of dollars in health care!

I remember little from my grade school and high school art education, but I found it easy to apply what I learned about harmony, balance, dominance and emphasis, similarity and contrast, etc. in my yard, and it was pure fun to create garden beds with meandering edges, and to use brick dividers (meandering also) in the patio, pointing to “featured elements” of apricot and almond trees.  (A refresher in art basics is as close as the public library!)

Functionality, ergonomics

DSC04421

This formerly rectangular yard was made both more attractive and more functional by expanding the edge gardens toward the center, leaving just enough room for walkways and seating.

Don’t start those lines meandering until you’ve considered as many functions of your yard as you can possibly imagine.  Where do you need to walk the most often, less often, or once a year?  What do you need to store?  Try to think of everything, and then add more space for the unexpected.

What are your physical needs?  Those of your family and friends?  Consider the future and decide where you might want to plan paths, now or later, wide enough for a wheelchair.

Do you want to change the location of anything?  Is your hose bib in the sun in winter?  Is your compost near the back door, but not too near?  Are your gardens convenient to the kitchen, especially beds of things you use often, like herbs, or need to check regularly, like those zucchini?

Do you have furniture that lets you enjoy the yard fully?  Do you need a place for people or animals to play?  Do you like the idea of a social space for friends to gather?  If so, what’s needed for that?  Would an outdoor fireplace extend your enjoyment of your yard?

Do you have a work table outside, to clean all that harvested food or those flowers before bringing them inside?

DSC04401

Soon we’ll plumb this enameled-metal sink – with solar-heated water – for lots of planting and clean-up convenience! Underneath there’s lots of good storage.

Is anything too low or too high for comfort?  Can you change that?

Straight rows of vegetables have a few advantages, easily accepting rectangular shading and rectangular cold frame boxes.  But there are advantages in a circle too!  A 6-foot-diameter round garden with a “keyhole” entry to the center allows the gardener to access it all from one spot, and – best – let’s the gardener twist and turn ergonomically, healthily, while tending the plants!

One winter squash plant will be nestled in the center of each lobe of this adapted “keyhole” garden – under the sunflowers adding their nitrogen. (The keyhole is the entryway to the center.)

Economics

winter solstice

Windows in full sun on the Winter Solstice!

summer solstice

Windows in full shade on the Summer Solstice!

A well-designed yard with appropriate passive solar design can save hundreds of dollars each year in energy and water bills, and can provide as much in food and herbal medicines.  If you compost and recycle, you’ll help the whole community with landfill costs and be able to amend your soil for free.

A good design can also add living space, and that and the beauty will enhance the value of your home.

And maybe your yard or garden can help you earn an income.

If you ever get more food than you can eat or easily process, consider a simple food dryer.  It’s a huge money-saver and time-saver over canning.

These home-made food drying trays are made of hardware cloth, lined with plastic window screen and shielded from insects with the same, sitting on reflective corrugated metal - easy to construct and easy to break down and store.

These home-made food drying trays are made of hardware cloth, lined with plastic window screen and shielded from insects with the same, sitting on reflective corrugated metal – easy to construct and easy to break down and store.

Ditto drying your clothes on a line outside.  Do you have a good place in the sun for the line?  Consider those that roll-up against the side of the house.

Solar ovens also save money, and we users insist the food tastes better!

Stuffed bell peppers cooking with the sun - a summer favorite!

Stuffed bell peppers cooking with the sun – a summer favorite!

Also consider an outdoor shower or tub, to cool off when working outside and then to recycle the water into the garden – another savings!

Refreshing, convenient, and the bathwater doubles as plant water!

Refreshing, convenient, and the bath water doubles as plant water!

Ecology

No need for plastic patio mist machines when you have good passive solar design.  That means planning to get solar radiation in the winter to your home and patio – and gardens, compost, chickens, dog house, hose bibs, etc, while protecting many of those elements from the sun in summer.  Since the winter sun cuts a low arc across the southern sky and the summer sun rises and sets northerly and crosses the sky higher overhead, we can plan to get solar gain to specific elements in winter and shade some of them from the east, west, and overhead in summer.

It’s a great puzzle!  Not only 3-D, but changing though time – the fourth dimension – the seasons and years, as trees and other shade-producing plants grow and deciduous ones lose and regain their leaves every year!  Yes, a puzzle-worker’s delight – in 4-D!

ALL the roof water descends on this one corner.  Whatever overflows the tank is directed alongside the swale ("low place") around the patio alongside the fruit trees!

ALL the roof water descends on this one corner. Whatever overflows the tank is directed alongside the swale (“low place”) around the patio alongside the fruit trees!

Then there’s water.  We’ve recently joined billions of people all over the planet who need to fight to protect their water source.  And with the weather becoming increasingly erratic, the water concern is even greater.  So, to be responsible for our water use, we must heavily mulch our gardens, plant appropriate desert-adapted species, and use as efficiently as possible the rainwater that falls on our property.  Since the average American roof can harvest 1,000 gallons in a good rainfall, it makes sense to either save it in tanks or direct it to collect in gentle swales, shallow depressions.  These are most attractive when they are shallow, perhaps just a few inches deep, and especially when they meander across your property, maybe alongside your pathways, providing a place for herbs, flowers, and trees.  There’s no sense in letting the water flood the street – or flood your yard and paths.  Design!

Plastic offends my sensibilities, though obviously modern life demands that we accept it. Still, I see no need to have any more of it in my private garden than is necessary.  So I pay more for products that will one day go back to the Earth easily and naturally, and I discover there’s an awful lot of stuff that just isn’t necessary.  Plastic garden hoses I don’t know how to get around.  Our water harvesting tank, recycled from a natural food container, was ugly to me, so we plastered over it to blend in with the granite hillside.

We buy nothing toxic at the nursery, except for one thing to eradicate the elm trees – an invasive species that will kill off all competitors.  If anyone knows of a natural option, please let me know, and I’ll spread the word far and wide.

Honeybees all over the planet are in decline.  By planting gardens and tending them organically, we can do a small part to sustain the bees.  And bee-keeping is becoming a popular avocation, enhancing one’s garden productivity, providing free honey (with local pollen, homeopathic allergy help) and high-value wax, as well as helping the planet with her bees.   (I’m planning one for our roof.)

To the right of our front door, "Johnny Jump-ups" (little blue and white violas) were recently seeded beneath the straw mulch.  To the right is a pottery bowl always kept full of water for small wildlife.  Near the stones and crystals is a young wisteria that'll one day cascade its blooms in an arch over the doorway!

To the right of our front door, “Johnny Jump-ups” (little blue and white violas) were recently seeded beneath the straw mulch. To the right is a pottery bowl always kept full of water for small wildlife. Near the stones and crystals is a young wisteria that’ll one day cascade its blooms in an arch over the doorway!

All wildlife is stressed these days, but our yards can provide some habitat by including native species.  It’s best to avoid bird-feeders (using seed from mono-culture crops elsewhere that destroyed native habitat, and requiring long-distance transportation and plastic bags), but the old birdseed can be allowed the sprout where it has fallen, then the stalks can be gathered and set out for the birds, to fall and sprout again.  But the local, native food, of course, is best.

Lizards love stones for their homes and can be counted on to provide a degree of free insect control, so be sure to use piles of stones in your yard.  And bat houses (designs online) can do even more.

If you have deer in your neighborhood, please don’t feed them.  They quit eating what’s healthiest for them, then bother your neighbors, and eventually get moved and/or killed by Game and Fish.

Respect for the Earth and others

The more I work this puzzle, try to put together my own little, healthy living ecosystem on this barren granite hill cut (a desert in a desert, coming to new life), the more impressed I am by the fragility and resiliency of life.  I think now before I put a blade into the soil.  The micro-organisms, fungi, worms, and other lifeforms don’t like the light and dry air and will quickly die.  Do I need to do what I’m doing?  If so, perhaps I can mitigate my activities.

As gardener, I have the life of every living thing in this garden in my hands.  I’m like God to these beings – or Goddess.  Am I conscious of this responsibility?  Not always, I’m sorry to say, but I’m becoming more so.

Finally, I’ll admit that I’ve been blessed to experience the Mysterious in the garden – Intelligences that have been given many names throughout time:  elementals, devas, faeries, gnomes, sprites, undines, etc.  Whatever their names, they’ve been described by philosophers of different eras, Paracelsus and Rudolph Steiner, in particular, and many other mystics throughout time.  These intelligences are credited with the health of all living things on the planet.  We might forego those other names and just call them the life force.  In any case, the life force is intelligent, powerful, healing, and essential – not just for our gardens, but for us.  If we respect It, it respects us and can help us.

Peaches enjoys a place in the garden I haven't yet made inaccessible this year by laying pruned tree limbs across them.

Peaches enjoys a place in the garden I haven’t yet made inaccessible to her this year by laying pruned tree limbs across them.

And so the garden blesses me whenever I take the time to sit in it.  It gives me beauty, privacy, relaxation, healthy food (for family and chickens), herbal medicines, water I can use, sun when I want it, shade when I want it, comfort, ease, entertainment, delight, and a place for friends to gather now and then.

It also helps me be consciousness of the infinite intelligence of our cosmos.

 

Jean Eisenhower is proprietor and designer at Home and Garden Inspiration.  She loves consulting to help others design their gardens!

This article is also posted online here It’s online here – http://www.desertexposure.com/201406/prt_201406_bms_ecosystem.php – but with only one photo.

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More knitting and crochet ;}

04 Saturday Apr 2015

Posted by Jean Eisenhower in artwork

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Tags

crochet, journals, knitting, local artwork

Sorry to report I’m having heart problems again, so haven’t been out and about much.

But I’m still able to crochet and knit!  

So I thought I’d share some of my latest creations, “big” (only 6″ tall, but took many hours to create) and little:

“The Gnome Bag,” of Peruvian “eco-wool,” un-dyed, natural brown wool, knitted, with roll top, tassels, and button-loop closure. Felted for strength.  6″ tall.

IMG_2655

IMG_2656

Micro-crocheted cotton medicine bag, 4″ long with 24″ loop, on card with a soft moss-green 100% recycled-paper gift envelope.

IMG_2657

Star-pattern crochet of locally hand-spun wool – a bracelet, bookmark, or tie, on a card with a moss-green 100% recycled-paper gift envelope.

All items are at The Common Thread gallery in Silver City.  

More of my work is at “It Takes a Village,” also in Silver City.

And I have journals with my “Waveform Heptagon Mandala” art at Guadalupe’s, also in Silver City (open Thursdays-Saturdays).  On the reverse is interesting information about the mathematics and esoterica of the number 7 (heptagons are 7-sided).

mandala waveform

All stores are in the lovely historic downtown Silver City  arts district.  

Proud to be back!

 

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I am a Weaver

04 Saturday Apr 2015

Posted by Jean Eisenhower in artwork

≈ 4 Comments

weaver art

Art by Asante Riverwind.

Just thought I’d share a prose-poem I wrote in 2004 to go with this art by Asante Riverwind…

I am a Weaver

Over the millennia, I’ve raised my sheep for wool, grown my flax and hemp,

or bought these items from friends near and far.

With my babies by my feet, I’ve spun my yarn and woven my cloth,

using patterns of my grandmothers and colors of the land.

Rhythms of season and day planned my work,

as I rose with the sun, saw to my children’s needs

and their education in our world,

and I showed them my place in it.

Today, I punch a clock at eight, regardless of weather or season or birthdays

or illness or gardening that needs to be done.

My babies stay with someone else.

I weave a stranger’s design and use fibers that often don’t grow on our Earth.

I cannot sell my ancient craft,

because some men arranged the change the world this way.

I’ve heard people say, with happiness,

“They were so cheap, I had to buy two!”

Then later, “My closets are so full!  Where did this all come from?”

then they laugh and add, “But I have nothing I want to wear.”

My work is so cheap, even when it’s still in good repair,

people cannot resell it, so they give it away, or throw it away.

I love handsome clothes, but I cannot afford them,

so I, too, wear industrial clothes.

And I, to, have more than I really need.

But none that I really love.

I would trade everything I have

for well-made items of sturdy, handsome fabric, crafted from the land,

if I could again do work I was proud of

and be director of my days.

copyright 2004 Jean Eisenhower

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New Artwork! The “Bird Nest Bag” ~

25 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by Jean Eisenhower in artwork

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

fiber art, New Mexico art, New Mexico fiber art, one-of-a-kind art, Silver City art, Silver City fiber art, unique art, unique fiber art, unique handbag, unique purse

IMG_2622

The “Bird Nest Bag” is my first major piece since changing my life direction back to art.

It was knitted of Peruvian “Eco-wool” – un-dyed, natural wool which I boiled to “felt” it. Felting, and especially boiling, shrinks and binds the individual fibers together, making the knitted fabric very tight and strong.

At the same time, I moth-proofed it with peppermint and lavender oils and fresh rosemary sprigs in the water.  The contrasting fringe, also felted in the process, is wool hand-spun by a friend.

IMG_2615

Small crocheted bowls of natural, hand-spun wool

This morning the “Bird Nest Bag” and other pieces were juried into The Common Thread, the retail gallery of the Southwest New Mexico Fiber Arts Collective in Silver City.

More of my artwork is on this site here:  https://jeaneisenhower.com/artist/

~

You might have noticed I’ve moved my “activist” work to the “previous” category, and singing also.  Both of these wonderful activities have for too long been part of what I’ve jokingly called “too many inspirations,” but it wasn’t a good joke, as it had become much too much, even debilitating – so I quit!  And I’m happier now.

I look forward to posting more artwork here soon.

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