top of page

Art from invasive alien species

Mulberry-landing_edited_edited.png

Mulberry Landing

A salt-tolerant White Mulberry flanks a Phragmites marsh on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. 

Weed soot ink and Multiflora Rose ink printed onto
White Mulberry paper from a Norway Maple block.

Image: 6" x 3.5"

Edition of 17

Index160916.jpg

40th Place NW — Index160916

District of Columbia alleys are rich with exotic invasive plant species, which thrive in sunny disturbed soils. 

Inks from weed soot, Multiflora Rose, Amur Honeysuckle, English Ivy and Leatherleaf Mahonia  printed onto
White Mulberry paper from a Norway Maple block.

Image: 10" x 10"

Passion_of_St_Ailanthus1000.jpg

The Passion of St. Ailanthus

A Tree of Heaven grows at the entrance of a unpaved parking lot in D.C.
Bumpers have rammed it; machetes have hacked it; nails, screws and staples have pierced it; but it survives — even thrives.

Weed-soot ink printed onto
White Mulberry paper from a Norway Maple block. Tree-of-Heaven frame.

30" x 35"

bottom of page