laughter's echo now silent
today a solitary wildflower in her unkempt garden
soft smile curved her lips
and she whispered a joyful word
Healing Powers of Medical Qigong especially for seniors & those challenged with trauma from stroke and cancer. Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Acupuncture, Chinese Herbs, Ancient Medical Tattooing & Yang Sheng, Nature Art & Music. Blogging about how to grow, obtain & create your survival medicine supply.
Spending time in forests can greatly inspire an artist looking to create native plant artwork, offering them an opportunity to explore and understand the intricate beauty of nature in its purest form.
Nature Art, Finding Inspiration In the Forests and Swamps
Below are some of my thoughts about the many ways how a forest could serve as a wonderful resource for any artist but especially a native plant artist:
Observation and Realism: The first and foremost benefit of being in a forest is the opportunity to observe native plants in their natural habitats. The artist can study their forms, colors, and textures in detail. This direct observation can lead to more realistic and accurate representations in the artwork.
Seasonal Changes: A forest presents an ever-changing tableau as the seasons shift, offering a range of different visuals from fresh spring blossoms to autumn foliage. The artist can depict the lifecycle of the plants or create a series of artwork illustrating these transitions.
Connection with Nature: Immersion in a forest allows the artist to develop a deep, personal connection with nature. This emotional bond could be reflected in the artwork, creating pieces that not only depict the physical aspects of the plants but also the artist's feelings towards them.
Understanding Ecosystems: A forest provides a unique opportunity to understand the interdependence of various life forms. By noticing how plants interact with other elements of the forest, such as animals and weather, the artist could incorporate these aspects into the artwork, making it richer and more complex.
Inspiration and Creativity: The serenity and beauty of a forest can stimulate an artist's creativity. The variations in landscapes, the play of light and shadow, the myriad colors, shapes, and textures, all contribute to an array of visual stimuli that can trigger new ideas and approaches to the artwork.
Symbolism: Plants in a forest can carry a wealth of symbolism, often tied to cultural or spiritual beliefs. An artist may choose to incorporate these symbolic meanings into their artwork, adding layers of depth and interpretation to their pieces.
Learning Different Perspectives: Spending time in a forest can lead an artist to see things from different perspectives. They might find beauty in the understory that many overlook, or see the towering majesty of old-growth trees. Each new perspective provides fresh inspiration for artwork.
Healing & Health: I can speak from first hand experience here as to just how spending time in the wilds has redirected my mind from dwelling on my physical challenges and instead allowing me the opportunity to instead see the beauty of the natural world around me. Fresh air, sunshine, earth colors & hues, wildlife sounds, bird calls, all these help me breathe deeper and feel more whole. When I feel uplifted physically then my mind is ready to create art.
So, spending time in forests allows me to develop a deeper understanding of the natural world, fostering creativity and providing endless inspiration for my native plant artwork. Through direct observation and immersion in nature, we artists can create pieces that are not only visually stunning but also imbued with a sense of authenticity and emotional depth.
One hour audio clip of a Green Tree Frog chorus (Hyla cinera) along the banks of Headquarter's Pond in the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge. Occasional Pig Frog calls are interspersed throughout the Green Tree Frog choruses.
Nature languages possess many important survival, health and community qualities. Listening to the languages of nature can bring us humans closer to our evolutionary roots, heal our hypertension and stress and open many doors of adventure and opportunity.
We humans have long forgotten how to listen to what nature is telling us. Enjoy this hour of these aquatic frogs as they chorus together.
Bioacoustics and nature audio art.
Pig frog calls along the banks of Headquarters Pond in the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge. June 6, 2021 8pm-9pm.
Bioacoustic & audio art from the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge.
One hour evening bird, frog and wildlife calls. Bathe yourself in the sounds of Florida's nature for health!
This audio is an hour clip of the nighttime calls of many different species of frogs living in a shallow, freshwater coastal pond in Northern Florida.
Here is the link to the audio: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxGYzO7fmrU&t=1101s
I find these calls to be relaxing and calming, bringing back memories of my childhood when I'd spend the night with my grandparents in their Spanish style stucco house near the everglades in Miami.
With the large windows wide open, the nighttime calls and conversations of the many frogs living in the dense vegetation echoed into the bedroom.
Today listening to these frog calls I am transported back to a treasured period in my childhood, a period full of nature's healing.
Approaching early morning thunderstorm provided an opportunity to set up recorder under a native azalea (Rhododendron spp.).
The native azalea's leaf cover is minimal, so audio from wind, rain and thunder would be significant.
Unlike the Southern Magnolia rainstorm, the native azalea does not offer much cover from the storm.
Sounds of weather events vary when recorded under different plant canopies and offer insights to how ecosystems integrate and how wildlife may respond accordingly.
Following up on my previous pre-midnight frog call recording adjacent a brackish sawgrass dominated shoreline with saltbush and wax myrtle thickets up from the water's edge, here is an hour audio clip from shortly after midnight to just after 1 AM.
I found a couple of observations to be of interest, including;
I posted an audio/video of lagoon night frog calls yesterday. This clip is actually the first part (late afternoon) of the frog calls clip.
Twenty three minutes into the recording the winds become more varied and frogs begin to call as do doves. For a varied listening experience move the video/audio indicator to half way through the timeline.
Here is the link if the YouTube video/audio does not function: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awez30KTDy0
Two different bioacoustic perspectives are shared in this post. The first is a short audio clip of bees buzzing around springtime Ilex opaca holly flowers captured with omni stereo microphones, or what us humans might hear if we stood close enough and still enough.
The second video is made using a set of piezo microphones attached directly to the American holly flowers so as to capture the vibrations experienced by the native plant when bees fly into their open blooms, roughly foraging for nectar and pollen.
The piezo microphones in the second video are constructed with alligator clips fastened directly to the piezo disk. This contact microphone arrangement allows for us to experience the vibrations flowing through the flowers into the plant stems. These vibrations are more consistent with what the holly is experiencing than the first video shared above where soundwaves travelling through the are are captured by the recorder. I always find it interesting to put myself in the place of the native plants with respect to life experiences.
Learning to examine nature from perspectives other than those normal avenues I am used to has helped me see a much more encompassing and larger picture of the world we live in. This in turn keeps my mind 'flexible' and open to learning.
Field recording too helps heal my constant health challenges including PTSD and stress. Field recording gets me out in nature where I breath in fresh air, get exercise and absorb vitamin D.
Both of these recordings were made with a Sony PCM. The microphones were a pair of DIY piezo disks and then a set of Clippy 272s. Windshields were not used on the piezos but were used on the Clippys.
It is always good to examine even the most routine of life events from other's perspectives. Finally, nature art is amazing.
Two minute clip of Blue Jays, Cyanocitta cristata, fussing over foraging territory with other birds and squirrels.
Sony recorder, Lom Mikro Usi, Windbubbles & a dry bag.
Although I started this work five years ago I refine and add to it most times when I return to the art. This is because of my ever evolving world view and because each day I learn more and more of the ways of nature.
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Life Beginnings in the Mangrove Swamps |
The work features the bed of sea water and mangrove leaves which themselves represent an ecosystem unmatched in life biodiversity, one even home to the snapping shrimp. The snapping shrimp though such a small creature, is one of the loudest life forms found in the ocean.
This art piece also features symbols of human thoughts about life, those from different cultures throughout the world and time. Nature Art therapy has provide an invaluable benefit to my healing from aortic dissection and kidney cancer.
This image is also one of my first few NFTs I am uploading to Rarible.
So much to see and think about in nature.
Sketch of one of my favorite dune reptiles, the Gopher Tortoise, Gopherus polyphemus.
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Dune Gopher Tortoise and Railroad Vine |
Working with nature, native plants and wildlife has healed many of my aortic dissection problems. Nature art and art therapy focused on native plants and wildlife is such a great healing modality.
Mulberry is an outstanding native landscape plant, contributing benefit to birds, wildlife and humans alike.
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Nature Art, Kevin Songer |
Here is part of a torch and black gum pallet work I did featuring red mulberry along with the Eyes of Providence and more. I see the Eyes of Providence representing all the songbirds waiting for Morus to fruit their so sweet and delicious berries.
Art therapy has become such a powerful healing tool in my health management repertoire.
Under the Southern Magnolia, Magnolia grandiflora rain drops quietly to the brown carpet of large leaves.
Above, as towering cathedral arches, branches reach out then bow downward forming a magnificent shelter from the weather.
I find the rain audio is much gentler, more soft under the magnolia than below the Yaupon holly, Ilex vomitoria I recorded beneath the other day.
Enjoy 45 minutes of a soft rain while imagining you are resting under the evergreen giant.
Sony PCM M10, Clippy 272 stereo mics & wind bubbles.