Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
Next revision
Previous revision
Next revisionBoth sides next revision
parn:garginz [2013-04-25 10:58] – [Misc] alkanparn:garginz [2013-05-28 09:38] – [Garginz] alkan
Line 1: Line 1:
 ===== Garginz===== ===== Garginz=====
  
-Garginz is the reference node of [[:parn:borrowed_scenery_arn|Borrowed Scenery]]. On this page you will find a collected and partially annotated set of links and resources concerning all things green.+<blockquote>**Garginz** has been the ongoing archive and reference repository for [[http://borrowed-scenery.net/|Borrowed Scenery]]. Its aim is to consolidate, group and summarise most of the relevant links scattered across the Libarynth and function as a convenient resource for visitors and developers. Within the logic of the project's narrative, it also reflected the efforts of the archivist patabotanist character, Armoracio "Bud" Mineuz, and was thus also in part subsumed within the augmented reality narrative.</blockquote>
  
 ==== Record of the Gent Plant People ==== ==== Record of the Gent Plant People ====
Line 16: Line 16:
 "We propose that parallel to the field of HCI - Human Computer Interaction, we should explore the field of HPI - Human Plant Interaction. HPI explores the nature of surfaces and processes required to facilitate reciprocal interaction between humans and plants. Historically, interaction between humans and plants has ranged from parasitic to collaborative. However, for HPI to become mutually beneficial, a symbiotic relationship may be most appropriate. Before a Human-Plant symbiosis becomes possible, we need to ask ourselves why, where and how can this two-way interface be realised? What cognitive and social biases need to be overcome? Can we develop a generalisable approach to interfacing with the entire plant kingdom, or do we require localised interactions between different species, ecotopes or alkaloids?" "We propose that parallel to the field of HCI - Human Computer Interaction, we should explore the field of HPI - Human Plant Interaction. HPI explores the nature of surfaces and processes required to facilitate reciprocal interaction between humans and plants. Historically, interaction between humans and plants has ranged from parasitic to collaborative. However, for HPI to become mutually beneficial, a symbiotic relationship may be most appropriate. Before a Human-Plant symbiosis becomes possible, we need to ask ourselves why, where and how can this two-way interface be realised? What cognitive and social biases need to be overcome? Can we develop a generalisable approach to interfacing with the entire plant kingdom, or do we require localised interactions between different species, ecotopes or alkaloids?"
  
-  * [[:groworld_hpi_ii]] +  * [[:groWorld HPI]] 
-  * [[:groworld_hpi]] +  * [[:groWorld HPI II]]
 ==== Fungal interventions ==== ==== Fungal interventions ====
  
Line 31: Line 30:
   * [[Radio Mycelium]], notes and digressions from the [[http://fo.am/radio_mycelium/|2012 workshop]]   * [[Radio Mycelium]], notes and digressions from the [[http://fo.am/radio_mycelium/|2012 workshop]]
   * [[Approaching the Inexplicable]], the most eloquent stream of consciousness yet on the fusion between human, fungal and other minds through particular apparatus   * [[Approaching the Inexplicable]], the most eloquent stream of consciousness yet on the fusion between human, fungal and other minds through particular apparatus
 +
 ==== Viriditas ==== ==== Viriditas ====
  
Line 40: Line 40:
   * [[:viridian principles]], the principles of [[:viridian design]]   * [[:viridian principles]], the principles of [[:viridian design]]
   * [[:viridian green]], a shade of viridian design   * [[:viridian green]], a shade of viridian design
 +
 ==== Plant Magick and Alchemy ==== ==== Plant Magick and Alchemy ====
  
-Various strains of [[:magick]] include [[:agriculture_magic|toad rites]] and [[:magickal_resistance]]. Terence McKenna surfaces again with [[:lectures_on_alchemy]], and one must not forget [[:the_deoxyribonucleic_hyperdimension]] nor [[:the_dheoxyrissonucleic_hytherdimension]]. Fragmentary [[:alchemical_notes]] may be misleading.+Various strains of [[:magick]] include [[:agriculture_magic|toad rites]] and [[:magickal resistance]]. Terence McKenna surfaces yet again in his [[:Lectures on Alchemy]], and one must not forget the venerable [[:the_deoxyribonucleic_hyperdimension|Deoxyribonucleic Hyperdimension]] nor its hyperspatial Other, [[:The Dheoxyrissonucleic Hytherdimension]]. Fragmentary [[:alchemical notes]] may be misleading.
  
-  * [[:magick]] +  * [[:magick]] wisdom quote 
-  * [[:agriculture_magic]] +  * [[:agriculture magic]]: "Forget compost or plant guilds people, you better get some toads!" 
-  * [[:lectures_on_alchemy]] +  * [[:Lectures on Alchemy]] by Terence McKenna 
-  * [[:the_deoxyribonucleic_hyperdimension]] +  * [[:The Deoxyribonucleic Hyperdimension]] 
-  * [[:the_dheoxyrissonucleic_hytherdimension]]+  * [[:The Dheoxyrissonucleic Hytherdimension]]
  
 ==== Tarot and Ethnobotany ==== ==== Tarot and Ethnobotany ====
  
-The definitive resource on the interweaving of the [[:tarot]] stories with ethnobotany is the [[tarot_tutorial]], with supplementary [[:tarot_notes|notes]] and addenda on [[:card_design]]. "What do plants and Tarot have in common? The answers are manifold - from looking at plants that can influence our mood to make us act as The Fool or The Empress, to plants having physical characteristics of The Star or The Hermit. The links can be made on the symbolic, iconographic, botanical, physiological, hermetic and many other levels. Plants are so embedded in our culture, that linking them to deep cultural archetypes in Tarot unveils the intricate relationships we have with the vegetal realm, extending far beyond mere food and fuel."+The definitive resource on the interweaving of the [[:Tarot]] stories with ethnobotany is the [[tarot_tutorial]], with supplementary [[:tarot_notes|notes]] and addenda on [[:card design]]. "What do plants and Tarot have in common? The answers are manifold -- from looking at plants that can influence our mood to make us act as The Fool or The Empress, to plants having physical characteristics of The Star or The Hermit. The links can be made on the symbolic, iconographic, botanical, physiological, hermetic and many other levels. Plants are so embedded in our culture, that linking them to deep cultural archetypes in Tarot unveils the intricate relationships we have with the vegetal realm, extending far beyond mere food and fuel."
  
-  * [[tarot_tutorial]] +  * [[:Tarot]] links on the Libarynth… 
-  * [[:tarot_notes]] +  * [[tarot_tutorial|Tarot and Ethnobotany]] by Paola Orlic and Claud Biemans, interweaving stories, myths, legends, history… 
-  * [[:tarot]] +  * [[:tarot_notes|notes and sketches for a patabotanical Tarot deck]], with links to each of the Major Arcana 
-  * [[:card_design]]+  * Visual materials for [[:card_design|p~lot card design]]
  
 ==== Gardens, Gardeners and Gardening ==== ==== Gardens, Gardeners and Gardening ====
Line 65: Line 66:
 "Gardens encourage and accommodate a broad range of activities; in substance these have changed little through the centuries and are recorded in garden paintings from late medieval French manuscripts to Fragonard and Pater. Gardens are territories of play - both play as alternative to work or business and play as theater, make-believe, the whole gamut of role playing that is human life. Though this last is not obviously confined to gardens, it flourished there because gardens are special sites of artifice pretending to be nature; though if you were convinced a garden was wholly natural, you were tempted to think you could dispense with role playing." (John Dixon Hunt, //Gardens and the Picturesque,// p. 263) "Gardens encourage and accommodate a broad range of activities; in substance these have changed little through the centuries and are recorded in garden paintings from late medieval French manuscripts to Fragonard and Pater. Gardens are territories of play - both play as alternative to work or business and play as theater, make-believe, the whole gamut of role playing that is human life. Though this last is not obviously confined to gardens, it flourished there because gardens are special sites of artifice pretending to be nature; though if you were convinced a garden was wholly natural, you were tempted to think you could dispense with role playing." (John Dixon Hunt, //Gardens and the Picturesque,// p. 263)
  
-  * [[:借景]] +  * [[:借景]], //jiejing/////shakkei//, "borrowed scenery" 
-  * [[:borrowed_scenery]] +  * [[:borrowed scenery]] terminology 
-  * [[:on_gardeners]] +  * [[:on gardeners]] and gardening as therapy, sanctuary, symbol and coral reef… 
-  * [[:category_gardens]] +  * [[:category gardens]]: //hortus gardinus,// a cultivated enclosed area; follow this link for the uncultivated wild world of gardening links 
-  * [[:brussels_plants]]+  * [[:Brussels plants]] are no less weird than the city in which they grow, or the studios that grow in that city 
 +  * reading notes from Deborah Kellaway'[[:Women Gardeners]]
  
-=== Urban and edible gardening, permaculture and guilds ===+==== Urban and edible gardening, permaculture and guilds ====
  
-These are links to ideas and initiatives that span activist gardening such as seedballing and guerrilla gardening to reclaiming disused spaces in the city and indoors for productive cultivation. Whatever the scale of these forms of growing and gardening, they also incorporate various forms of cultivation techniques and principles, which are represented in this material as well.+Ideas and initiatives that span activist gardening such as [[:seedball|seedballing]] and [[:guerrilla gardening]] to [[:urban_gaps|reclaiming disused spaces]] in the city such as the [[:Church Garden]] project in Amsterdam, on [[:rooftop_garden|rooftops]] or indoors for productive cultivation. Whatever the scale of these forms of growing and gardening, they also incorporate various cultivation techniques and principles, which are represented in this material as well.
  
-  * [[:bringing_the_soil_to_life]] +  * [[:Bringing the soil to life]], reading notes from //Gaia's Garden// by Toby Hemenway  
-  * [[:church_garden]] +  * links about [[:companion planting]] 
-  * [[:companion_planting]] +  * [[:Creative Sustainable Cities]], notes from the 4th Connecting Civil Societies of Asia and Europe Conference in Brussels 
-  * [[:creative_sustainable_cities]] +  * Amsterdam Foamlab'[[:Church Garden]] project 
-  * [[:edible_gardening]]+  * [[:edible gardening]] in Amsterdam, an experimental guide to set up and live from city gardens
   * [[:edible_gardens_seed_nurseries]]   * [[:edible_gardens_seed_nurseries]]
   * [[:edible_guilds]]   * [[:edible_guilds]]
Line 93: Line 95:
   * [[:permaculture-research-methodology]]   * [[:permaculture-research-methodology]]
   * [[:permaculture]]   * [[:permaculture]]
 +  * [[:project_groworld_seedball]]
   * [[:roof_guilds]]   * [[:roof_guilds]]
   * [[:rooftop_garden]]   * [[:rooftop_garden]]
 +  * [[:seedball]]
   * [[:three_options_for_rooftop_gardens]]   * [[:three_options_for_rooftop_gardens]]
   * [[:tuin_van_jan]]   * [[:tuin_van_jan]]
-  * [[:urban_gaps]] 
   * [[:urban_edibles]]   * [[:urban_edibles]]
 +  * [[:urban_gaps]]
   * [[:urban_gardening]]   * [[:urban_gardening]]
   * [[:urban_ikebana]]   * [[:urban_ikebana]]
Line 105: Line 109:
   * [[:urban_permaculture_kits]]   * [[:urban_permaculture_kits]]
   * [[:urbanorchards]]   * [[:urbanorchards]]
-  * [[:women_gardeners]]+==== Some notes on individual plants ==== 
 + 
 +  * [[:Artemisia absinthium]], a species of the remarkable and mythical wormwood 
 +  * [[:Lavandula angustifolia]] 
 +  * [[:Valeriana officialis]] 
 +  * [[:elderberry|Sambucus nigra]], the elderberry
  
 ==== Plants Examined ==== ==== Plants Examined ====
Line 263: Line 272:
  
   * reading notes on the [[:Archaeology of Natural Places]]   * reading notes on the [[:Archaeology of Natural Places]]
-  * [[:Artemisia Absinthium]], a species of the remarkable and mythical wormwood 
   * [[:city nomads]] -- "not an American football club -- it's homeless people and refugees living in the Amsterdam bushes"   * [[:city nomads]] -- "not an American football club -- it's homeless people and refugees living in the Amsterdam bushes"
   * de Cleene and Lejeune's magisterial [[:Compendium of Symbolic and Ritual Plants in Europe]]   * de Cleene and Lejeune's magisterial [[:Compendium of Symbolic and Ritual Plants in Europe]]
-  * [[:elderberry]], Sambucus nigra +  * [[:Flower Arranging]], a talk by Thich Nhat Hanh 
-  * [[:flower_arranging]] +  * discussion about [[:further_local_discussion_about_the_anthropocentric_jungle|the anthropocentric jungle]] 
-  * [[:further_local_discussion_about_the_anthropocentric_jungle]] +  * Ellsworth Huntington'[[:garment of vegetation]]
-  * [[:garment_of_vegetation]]+
   * [[:hydromel]]   * [[:hydromel]]
-  * [[:lavandula_angustifolia]] 
   * [[:pataphysics]]   * [[:pataphysics]]
   * [[:river_of_flowers]]   * [[:river_of_flowers]]
Line 281: Line 287:
   * [[:wabi_sabi]]   * [[:wabi_sabi]]
   * [[:weedy_sociality_distributed_wilderness]]   * [[:weedy_sociality_distributed_wilderness]]
-  * [[:valeriana_officialis]] 
  • parn/garginz.txt
  • Last modified: 2019-11-16 13:58
  • by nik