Into the Weeds

August 13, 2017 – January 10, 2018 

Weeds are plants that grow in places other than where humans determine they should be. Weeds are the bane of existence across North Dakota, now an intensively planted, agricultural paradise. An adjacent industry has arisen just to kill weeds. Legal wars ensue between environmentalists and agribusinesses. Weeds, these undesirable or troublesome plants, adapt and continue to flourish. They quickly occupy empty spaces, abandoned spaces, condemned spaces. Vacant lots fill with weeds.

Artists, however, relish weeds. They represent exuberance, vigor, abundance, a cornucopia bursting with life. Weeds project the power to take over the world. Even farmers, growers, and gardeners will chuckle at their nemesis, those unwanted and abhorred weeds.

Artists include:

Francisco Alvarado, Kim Beck, Paterson Clark, Matt Collishaw, Joan Linder, Vivienne Morgan, Judy Onofrio, Eggert Pétursson, and Margaret Wall-Romana.

Installation Images

Mat Collishaw, Whispering Weeds, 2011.

Digital Edition Tailor-Made for Screens, Video Loop. Courtesy of Sedition

Margaret Wall-Romana, Flutter & Dart, 2017.

Oil, Acrylic, Maple Leaf on Birch Panel,  40 x 80 Inches.

Joan Linder, Hooker 102nd Street Book (Love Canal), 2013 and on.

Ink on 6 Moleskin Accordion Notebooks, Each 5.5 x 105 Inches.

Patterson Clark, Index1312ptd, 2017.

Alien Weed Pigments and Handmade Paper

Margaret Wall-Romana, Elemental Suspension, 2017.

Oil on Birch Panel with Metal Leaf. Triptych, 40 x 80 Inches.