As the title explains, Blaze of Whimsy was originally an exploration of fancy. On our wanderings through the woods and fields, we used our hunter’s orange to mark interesting spots and objects as we came upon them. No plan or structure other than the desire to walk and look informed our process.
We knew this work was temporary, and fully expected the ‘natural’ forces - animals and weather, to degrade these works in their own time, following their natural rhythms.
What we didn’t expect was human interruption - which is what happened. A helpful neighbor, who has taken on the hospitable task of cleaning trash and other ‘unnatural’ elements on the grounds, found our works, and removed some of them, thinking they were acts of vandalism.
We were annoyed and surprised. Why didn’t this man see the creative oddness of what we had done? What kind of high school kids would take the time to painstakingly avoid getting paint on the bark of the tree stumps they were painting? Why couldn’t he see that this was art?!
After our initial response, we were intrigued by the questions that this occurrence raised. Questions about ‘Nature’, questions about ‘Culture’, and questions about the context in which the two might interact.
A common way to think of ‘Nature’ is as a pure space, separate from human involvement, that has it’s own rules and occupants.
By this definition, culture is frequently thought of as the opposite of ‘Nature’ - a conceptual space entirely defined by humans. Science, arts, civil works.
So where were we out there in Pennsylvania - in nature? Clearly the young forests and exhausted field are the products of human intervention.
So maybe we were in culture instead. Centuries of human use had harnessed nature to its own ends. Architecture, agriculture, civic engineering were all around us.
Our works were made bright orange to scream out “CULTURE!” in a way we thought couldn’t be missed. What we didn’t think is that our bright orange ‘culture’ isn’t in contrast to nature, in fact ‘Nature’, as a pure inhuman realm, does not exist (at least not in Pennsylvania). Instead, what we are working with here are two different, and possibly conflicting ‘cultures’: rural and urban. Our works are speaking the language of the city, possibly the university, but not of the farms and forests. The helpful neighbor dismantled our work because he was placing what we did into the only construct these spaces had for it - vandalism.
Of course he ended up having a conversation with one of the artists and now our work has been replaced. What’s gonna be a bit harder is convincing the squirrels who stole our orange hazelnuts to give them back...
In the end, I think we can talk about nature, not as a space, pure or otherwise, but rather as a conversation taking place between humans and all the other voices that shape the world.