LAF Fellowship
David Buckley Borden has been awarded a 2024-2025 Fellowship in Innovation and Leadership by the Landscape Architecture Foundation (LAF), a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to “increase the influence and impact of landscape architects to create a more sustainable, just, and resilient future. Through thought leadership, signature programs, and strategic initiatives, LAF provides resources, knowledge sharing, and inspiration to empower landscape architects to use their unique skills to change the world” (LAF, 2024). The funded fellowship was established to foster transformational leadership capacity and support innovation to advance the field of landscape architecture. In the words of the LAF the “fellowship is an opportunity for landscape architecture professionals to dedicate the equivalent of 3 months’ time over the course of one year to nurture emerging ideas and to think deeply. It is designed as a time to reflect, research, explore, create, test, and develop ideas into action” (LAF, 2024).
David Buckley Borden’s LAF Fellowship Research Proposal Abstract
Emergent Mutualism: Closing the Science-Communication Gap through Collaboration between Ecology and Design
David Buckley Borden’s LAF Fellowship program will identify, develop, and articulate creative environmental-communication methods, models, and frameworks to answer the question, “How can interdisciplinary science-communication be re-imagined as a collaborative design process between landscape architects and ecologists?” The landscape architect’s role as an environmental communicator and educator is certainly nothing new. However, how the profession engages the scientific research community and then collaboratively educates the general public is worthy of inquiry, critical review, and the dissemination of evidence-based practice case studies. David’s fellowship builds off his ongoing interdisciplinary collaborations with scientists at long-term ecological research sites, including the Harvard Forest in central Massachusetts and the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest in Oregon’s Western Cascades.
Project Support
This design-research project is principally supported by the Landscape Architecture Foundation Fellowship for Innovation and Leadership. David’s LAF Fellowship work is further supported by the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes within the Landscape Architecture Department at the University of Oregon, the Oregon State University Foundations’ Andrews Fund by way of the HJ Andrews LTER program, the Center for the Future of Forests and Society at the Oregon State University’s College of Forestry, and the Harvard Forest, an off-site research department within the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University.
Folks can follow the project’s development on this webpage as well as David Buckley Borden’s Instagram.
David Buckley Borden’s LAF Fellowship Proposal
Emergent Mutualism; Closing the Science-Communication Gap through Collaboration between Science and Design
As ecological challenges become more acute, environmental scientists are increasingly thrust into the spotlight to communicate vital practical knowledge to landscape architects, policy makers, government agencies, community groups, and individuals. The need for motivating a population of non-scientists to both understand and care about ecology is essential. The urgency of transforming this ecological understanding to direct action is vital. Long-term sustainable practice depends on a heightened ecological awareness. I believe that environmental-communication collaborations between landscape architects and environmental research scientists can foster cultural cohesion around ecological issues. Ultimately, an informed public will become their own empowered advocates and are more likely to collaborate with landscape architects to support long-term landscape stewardship, land planning, and conservation practice. To that end, I would argue that the planet’s climate-crises demands new education models, communication methods, and fluid interdisciplinary models that fill the gap between design and science. Given landscape architecture’s new designation as a STEM industry by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the timing could not be better for forging new collaborative relationships with the hard sciences. I agree with ASLA President, Emily O’Mahoney, that “The STEM designation will be an additional tool in helping decision-makers understand the rigor this discipline demands” (ASLA, 2023).
In order to produce ecologically sensitive design and foster environmental stewardship, landscape architects must be educators. The designer’s role as an educator is certainly nothing new. I agree with Paulo Freire, the Brazilian philosopher, that education is the most transformative value-producing system in society (Freire, 1970). In this ethos, I would say that education is the most far-reaching investment of our collective design effort as landscape architects. Landscape architects have made remarkable investments in meaningful community engagement, education, and empowerment in recent years. However, I would argue that how the profession engages the scientific community and then collaboratively educates the general public is worthy of research, critical review, and the dissemination of evidence-based practice models. Through my own creative practice, working with scientists, and design teaching, I have actively researched and applied communication theory through the development of novel science-communication projects with research forests. To be clear, science-communication is generally defined as activities that communicate scientific information to non-scientists for the sake of knowledge, awareness, and decision-making (Burns, 2003). My own science-communication projects have taken many forms, ranging from environmental art on urban campuses to an art-based interpretive trail. Arguably, many of these media, cultural platforms, and engagement strategies exist on the margins of landscape architecture practice. However, I believe that we need new interdisciplinary methods of communication. To that end, I started collaborating with ecologists in 2016 as a Bullard Fellow in Forest Research at the Harvard Forest. This creative-research driven fellowship produced a series of science-communication based landscape installations, art exhibitions, public talks, and peer-reviewed publications. This watershed opportunity opened the door to other collaborations within the Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Network, including my current projects at the HJ Andrews Experimental Research Forest. The LTER Network is a largely untapped collaborative opportunity for landscape architects as the collection of 27 NSF-funded programs are engaged in researching every type of North American ecosystem. The LTER’s mission “is to provide the scientific community, policy makers, and society with the knowledge and predictive understanding necessary to conserve, protect, and manage the nation’s ecosystems, their biodiversity, and the services they provide” (LTER, 2023). The LTER mission squarely aligns with that of LAF and ASLA.
While my design-research with LTER sites has been productive in terms of creating physical objects, installations, exhibitions, and public events, my teaching schedule has left little capacity for critical reflection, writing, and peer-reviewed publication. I believe that this knowledge can contribute to the growing field of design-based science communication. I am also confident that it will develop new insights to strengthen landscape architects’ ability to communicate ecological issues with the rigor of hard science and the cultural nuance of artful design-thinking.
I envision the LAF Fellowship as an opportunity to research and share the theory and diverse practice of science communication with both landscape architecture and research science communities. Central to my proposed research is a deep dive into past practices and current trends of environmental communication by landscape architects with science research communities, specifically ecology and forestry at LTER sites. This research includes a historic survey of past practices for context, but privileges an exploration of new ideas, communication models, and practice modes to move science communication forward within the realm of environmental design practice. In particular, I am interested in answering the question, “How can landscape architects contribute to science-communication projects in order to foster cultural cohesion around ecological issues and help inform ecology-minded decision making.”
My LAF Fellowship project builds off my experience working with research scientists within the LTER network. This primary, practice-based, research would leverage collaborative experiences with the Harvard Forest and the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest. My critical reflection process would be characterized by post-project documentation, evaluation, internal critique, and partner feedback from LTER collaborators. I see the LAF Fellowship as an opportunity to evaluate these science-communication collaborations, and situate them in design practice, communication theory, and strategic direct-action environmental campaigns.
Through research into other LTER sites and current science-communication trends in landscape architecture I will conduct a literature review and informational interviews with practitioners. This new knowledge would then be synthesized with my past collaborations as case studies to illustrate a variety of science-communication models in terms of their functionality and successes, not to mention limitations and constraints. The studies would include a diversity of recent project types: site-specific landscape installations; narrative-driven exhibitions; art-based interpretive trails; community design-build projects; public art collaborations for direct-action campaigns; tactical pop-up installations for educational community events; and mentored MLA student science-communication collaborations with community conservation partners. These are all project types I’ve developed with scientists in recent years, several of which are featured in my portfolio submission.
The case study method would help answer the driving research question of “How can interdisciplinary science-communication be re-imagined as a collaborative design process for landscape architects and scientists?” However, I do not see these case studies as the final outcome, but a prompt for the development of a series of concise, accessible project-specific “How-to” booklets that combine design thinking, communication theory, experiential design, and public-engagement practice into a free publication to inspire others to engage in interdisciplinary collaboration with science research communities. The closest aspiration that I have found for the final products is perhaps Anne Godfrey’s Active Landscape Photography book series from Routledge. Godfrey’s series presents photography methods and case studies to interrogate relationships between landscape architecture and photography, and ultimately present a variety of creative methods that elevate photography into a rigorous design-research tool for understanding, planning, and designing landscapes. The ultimate outcome of the design-research is a road map to help inspire and instruct allied designers and scientists in collaborative science-communication.
The primary stakeholders for this work would initially be the LTER Network and landscape architects. The general audience is divided into two distinct professional groups, scientific research communities, and landscape architects along with allied environmental designers and planners. The allied design group would include national, regional, and local environmental and planning policy makers and of course members of APA and ASLA. In terms of the scientific community, the LTER Network occupies a rich research niche in a vast constellation of academic institutions and government agencies including NSF, NOAA, NEON, NPS, and other federal agencies working on climate security issues such as the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Interior. I imagine communication professionals at these organizations to be part of the larger target audience beyond the immediate LTER communities.
Although my Fellowship program is proposed as a design-research project, it is also a communication campaign, and ultimately an educational initiative for landscape architects, scientists, and the communities they both serve. My LAF program vision employs a model of stewardship that merges aesthetics, community interaction, environmental awareness, and communication media (examples of this model can be seen in my portfolio). Similar to my other public-facing projects, my Fellowship program would include integrated outreach and an ongoing shared narrative to illustrate the research issues at hand. A combination of traditional offline media and social media would promote reflection, critical thinking, and creativity among both scientists and designers. To that end, I look forward to working with LAF staff to coordinate these engagement efforts. I am also privileged to receive dissemination support, including additional matched funding from the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes and the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest LTER program to help the promotion and community-building around this research proposal.
David Buckley Borden
Eugene, Oregon
9/15/23
Works Cited:
ASLA News. Department of Homeland Security Designates Landscape Architecture a STEM Discipline, American Society of Landscape Architects, https://www.asla.org/NewsReleaseDetails.aspx?id=63963. July12, 2023.
Burns, Terry W. Science Communication, a Contemporary Definition. Sage Publishing, 2002.
Freire, Paulo. Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Continuum International Publishing Group, 1970.
Godfrey, Anne. Active Landscape Photography Methods of Investigation. Routledge, 2022.
Landscape Architecture Foundation, LAF Fellowship in Innovation and Leadership,https://www.lafoundation.org/what-we-do/leadership/laf-fellowship. September 13, 2023.
LTER Vision. Long-Term Ecological Research Network, National Science Foundation, https://lternet.edu/about/. September 14, 2023.
What's Your Sign?
What’s Your Sign? The Fieldscape Fellowship at Overlook Farm is a field school program within the Landscape Architecture Program at the University of Oregon. The design-build practicum centers on creative collaboration at the Fuller Farm outside of Scranton, PA. Students are tasked with the design and fabrication of a temporary site-specific landscape installation over the course of two intensive workshops. The first workshop took place during the summer of 2024 focusing on the conceptual development and building of proof of concept work. The second studio will take place in the summer of 2025 with the design-build phase of the final site-responsive work.
The Fieldscape Fellowship project explores folk graphics (barn hex and quilt blocks) and historic timber frame barns of Pennsylvania as cultural expressions for communicating environmental narratives relative to past, present, and future agriculture practices. The intention behind the Fieldscape Fellowship is to foster environmental education and landscape stewardship through creativity and community engagement.
An exhibition of the first phase of work, entitled What’s Your Sign is on view at the College of Design’s Lawrence Hall from October 1 to November 21 with a public reception on November 13th from 4:30 to 6:30. All are welcome.
Fieldscape Fellows:
Janessa “J” Beltran
Trevor Hattabaugh
Macie Kelley
Keith Stanley
Aidan Teppema
Sabine Winkler
Fieldscape Fellow Instructors:
Ian Escher Vierck
Nancy Silvers
David Buckley Borden
The Fieldscape Fellowship is fully funded by the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes at the University of Oregon.
Helves and Hallmarks of Collaboration
The Helves and Hallmarks of Collaboration project is a celebration of the individual contributions that make collective creativity so marvelous. “Big Innovation” wants you to believe that a sole leading genius is the mastermind of every outstanding collaboration and that the individual contributions are far less valuable than the grand creative total. Nonsense. Anyone who has served in the trenches of collaboration knows that the generative feedback loops between individuals amplify collective creativity to a level not possible by a single person, regardless of creative genius, emotional intelligence, and privileged funding access.
In a world of premium goods, arts, and crafts, hallmarks traditionally indicate the maker or fabricator as well as the quality of the product. In fact, the maker and perceived quality practically merge into “one” to become the “brand” over time. Hallmarks also designate the place and date of production as well as any additional background information that is deemed important by the creator, consumer market, or governing agency. A hallmark can be defined as a distinctive characteristic of a person or associated group of people. The Helves and Hallmarks of Collaboration project leans into this notion by highlighting the specific characteristics, background, and contribution of individuals in order to publicly appreciate their singular role within the larger plurality of creative cooperation.
Given the context of David Buckley Borden’s collaborations with his studio assistants, the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes at the University of Oregon, and the Oregon State University’s College of Forestry, the vintage branding and advertisement of axes, saws, and other related forestry tools provided an apt contextual aesthetic for the project. Many of the project’s graphic identities were inspired, remixed, and yes, blatantly derived (ripped off!) from classic axe brands such as the Kleen Cutter, Stormking, and Vulcan, to name a few. The period-inspired graphics of turn-of-the-century vintage axe brands romantically recalls a time past when lasting quality and a job well done was essential to nearly everyone’s vocational aspirations, be it an individual craftsperson or collective profession.
With all this said, each sign of the Helves and Hallmarks of Collaboration series strives to evoke the individual spirit of a singular person who is essential to David Buckley Borden’s collective interdisciplinary work with the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes and the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest from spring 2021 to fall 2024.
Helves and Hallmarks of Collaboration, commemorative sign series, ¾” AC plywood, milled pine, lasers, 3M blue tape, black ink, two-in-one primer, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, bees wax, dimensions variable, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Adam DeSorbo, Ashley Ferguson, Michael Nelson, and Blake Schouten.
This collaborative work was funded by the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes at Oregon University, the Oregon State University Foundation’s Andrews Fund, the Center for the Future of Forests and Society at OSU’s College of Forestry, and the sale of artwork on this website.
Helves and Hallmarks of Collaboration, initial design studies, as they appeared as a mock advert in Feral Fellowship (Untitled Book Bureau, 2024), 8 × 10 inches, 2024. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Ashley Ferguson.
Castor Axe (for Nancy Silvers) ¾” AC plywood, milled pine, lasers, 3M blue tape, black ink, two-in-one primer, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, beeswax, 12 × 18 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Adam DeSorbo, and Ashley Ferguson.
Tree Poisoning Axe (for Ashley Ferguson), ¾” AC plywood, milled pine, lasers, 3M blue tape, black ink, two-in-one primer, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, beeswax, 18 × 24 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Adam DeSorbo, and Ashley Ferguson.
Vulcan Axe (for Fred Swanson), ¾” AC plywood, milled pine, lasers, 3M blue tape, black ink, two-in-one primer, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, beeswax, 18 × 28 inches, 2024. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Adam DeSorbo, and Ashley Ferguson.
Warning Warming
Warming Warning, was a collaborative public art project installed on Harvard University’s Science Center Plaza (1 Oxford St. Cambridge, MA) from October 22nd to December 7th, 2018. This educational sculpture installation was a co-creation of Harvard Forest Fellow David Buckley Borden and Harvard Forest Senior Ecologist Aaron M Ellison that combined art, environmental design, and science communication to convey global climate-change data and spur action on campus. The 9’ ×x 10.5’ ×x 28’ sculpture installation was coupled with events, both on- and off- campus, that were geared towards local work on climate and pathways for direct action. Local Warming Warning programs included workshops and presentations at Le Laboratoire, Somerville Museum, Cambridge Public Schools Design Lab, Project Zero/Harvard Graduate School of Education, and the Harvard Science Center Plaza.
Warming Warning was designed to immerse visitors in a three-dimensional visualization of ongoing climate change. On one side, the > 1.5 °F change (since 1880) in the average global average temperature is lined in black highlighted atop as a white-to-red heat-gradient. The other side of Warming Warning illustrated four different future scenarios of carbon dioxide emissions. These were representative of the paths we can could take now towards that will lead either to a fossil fuel-free future or an increasingly warm and uninhabitable planet.
The design represented climate change as a series of painted triangles (“deltas”) constructed from standard 4” × 6” timbers. Sunlight channeled and diffused through 6” gaps between the timbers bounced off the brightly painted sides, endowing the whole sculpture with a ghostly luminosity. Shadow patterns and color-spectrum vibrancy shifted as the sculpture reflected the sun’s daily arc. The visual experience of the installation also changed in response to the visitor’s perspective. The combined dynamics animated the work throughout the day and rewarded repeated visits.
Finally, Warming Warning left space for more triangles to be added at the end of the series. A stack of nine wood timbers made up a reflection-bench that suggested each person’s role in the narrative of unfolding climate change. The primed seating elements prompted each visitor to consider how they could color the future through individual and collective actions to confront climate change.
This collaborative project was supported by a unique partnership between the Harvard Forest, Harvard University’s Office for Sustainability, and Harvard Common Spaces.
Warming Warning is now on view at the Harvard Forest “Farm” (formally the Petersham Country Club) in Petersham, MA.
Project Collaborators: Christian Delano Borden, David Buckley Borden, Bill Brown, Jack K Byers, Mike Demaggio, Collin Durrant, Jim DeStefano, P.E., Dr. Aaron M Ellison, Dr. David Foster, Lucas Griffith, CC McGregor, Roland Meunier, Dan Pederson, Matt Robinson, and John Wisnewski.
Unfinished Book Bureau
The Unfinished Book Bureau is a publishing endeavor created to document and distribute the creative work of David Buckley Borden and collaborators.
The birth of the Unfinished Book Bureau can trace its conception to the Fall of 2022 with the publication of Borden’s Ghost Forests Exhibition Guide. This initial short-run artist catalog, created with Trustman Art Gallery curator Helen Popinchalk, organically developed into a series of “zines” documenting Borden’s collaborative work with the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest and the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes at the University of Oregon. The initial zine titles were supported by a grant to Borden from the University of Oregon’s Sustainability Faculty Fellowship for Community-Engaged Learning, PNW Just Futures Institute.
The DIY ethos and practice of the Unfinished Book Bureau draws inspiration from community-driven underground music and radical political “zines” of the 1990’s. As such, not-for-profit, short-run, hard copy editions of each publication are offered for sale at cost on davidbuckleyborden.com. Digital copies of all Unfinished Book Bureau titles are available free to the public; simply email a short note with requested titles to dborden4@uoregon.edu.
Hard copies of Unfinished Book Bureau titles, while supplies last, can be purchased online here.
Available Unfinished Book Bureau titles:
Ghost Forests, artist exhibition catalog, fall 2022
PNW Tree ID Signs, exhibition guide, winter 2023
Forest Fashion, Lookout Edition, anthropological material culture survey, summer 2023
The Arboreal Goth Cone Collection, a morbid botany field guide, fall 2023
PNW Tree ID Signs, project profile, winter 2023
Forthcoming Unfinished Book Bureau titles:
Arboreal Anglers, by Ian Escher Vierk, et al., winter 2024
Atmos Weather Station, sci-comm installation, summer 2024
Lightning Stool Lot, a DIY design-build primer for electrocution, summer 2024
Rad Collab Flag, a vexillographer’s archive of soft voices for hard questions, summer 2024
Barns; Quilt and Hex, a graphic love letter, summer 2024
Arboreal Goth Cone Collection
UBB-005, PC-001, Fall 2023
Thirty-eight pages, 5.5 X 8.5 inch format, color copier printing, DIY zine featuring speculative design objects and writing by David Buckley Borden et al. Publication includes speculative design writing, project backstory, botanical naming primer, arboreal gothic culture exposé, and a dozen arboreal goth cultivars. Within the watercolor paper cover, one will find a variety of blow-ins including project postcards and a two-color 22 X 22 inch Arboreal Goth Collection 2023 AD black cotton bandana.
Limited edition of twenty-four hard copies. Twelve copies available for sale online.
Purchase your hard copy here.
Forest Fashion, Lookout Edition
UBB-003, PC-001, Summer 2023
Forty pages, 5.5 X 8.5 inch format, color copier printing, DIY design zine featuring creative writing and speculative design objects by David Buckley Borden and collaborators. The interdisciplinary Forest Fashion project debuted at Lawrence Hall at the College of Design, University of Oregon in the Spring of 2023. The publication includes speculative design writing, project backstory, EWS primer, and twenty featured works of design-fiction exploring backcountry “fashion” in wildfire prone landscapes. Within the etched-canvas waterproof cover, one will find a variety of blow-ins including color centerfold, project postcards, and other creative treats by the collaborative team of designers, artists, and scientists.
Limited edition of 44 hard copies. Twelve copies available for sale online.
Purchase your hard copy here.
PNW Tree ID Sign Exhibition Guide
UBB-002 PC-001, Winter 2023
Twenty pages, black and white, 5.5 X 8.5 inch format, DIY artist PNW Tree ID Sign exhibition guide at the University of Oregon’s College of Design in winter 2023. Content includes project backstory, creative process, eight featured works, and a PSA regarding black-clad Arboreal Goth gangs. Hand-sewn silkscreened, waterproof, cover by Vinnie Arnone, Helen Popinchalk, and Nancy Silvers.
Limited edition of thirty-four hard copies. Twelve copies available for sale online.
Ghost Forests Exhibition Catalog
UBB-001 PC-001, Fall 2022
Twenty pages, 5.5 X 8.5 inch format, DIY artist catalog of Ghost Forests exhibition at Simons University’s Trustman Art Gallery in fall 2022. Hand silkscreened cover by Helen Popinchalk, three blow-ins including, but not limited to color-print centerfold, exhibition postcards, 18 x 24 inch silkscreened EWS guide on newsprint, etc.
Limited edition of forty-four hard copies. Twelve copies available for sale online.
PNW Tree ID Sign Project
The PNW Tree ID Sign Project builds off the interpretive-sign tradition of identifying trees in situ as an educational program for trail users. This project specifically focuses on tree species found in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. The project’s tree selection covers a vast spectrum of species curated from Oregon’s high desert pine country to the coastal sitka ghost forests of Washington. The series includes iconic species, such as giant sequoia, as well as lesser known diminutive species such as the mountain hemlock. The graphic design of the mixed-media signs (recycled wood, paint, and lasers) is intended to tell botanical tales that are simultaneously ancient, unfolding, and complex in their relationships to Homo sapiens. Each sign identifies the species through the tree’s cone to communicate a cultural narrative as a means of making the arboreal information both accessible and memorable. The sturdy wood signs are built for easy installation and offer land stewards a tactical programming opportunity for an offbeat temporary interpretive trail. The signs are light enough to carry into remote locations with relative ease, yet durable enough to weather the climatic conditions of the Cascadian forest ecosystem.
The PNW Tree ID Sign project was documented with a humble DIY publication known as the Unfinished Book Bureau. The intention behind this publication was twofold; to showcase the dozen PNW Tree ID Signs, as well as provide insight into the project’s creative development, from initial design-narrative concept and pointed use of graphic tropes to fabrication method and output, to the final installation in the field. The interdisciplinary collaborators hope the work inspires others to create similar site-based landscape appreciation projects.
To date, the signs have been exhibited at the Trustman Art Gallery at Simmons University, the University of Oregon’s College of Art and Design, the Center for Art Research, Oregon State University’s College of Forestry, and guerilla installations throughout the University of Oregon campus and Hendricks Hill Park in Eugene, Oregon.
Collaborators: Vinnie Arnone, Rachel Benbrook, David Buckley Borden, Asa DeWitt, Ashley Ferguson, Evan Kwiecien, Isaac Martinotti, Madison Sanders, Blake Schouten, Nancy Silvers, Dr. Fred Swanson, and Ian Escher Vierck.
This project was funded by the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscape at the University of Oregon, Oregon State University Foundation’s Andrews Fund, and the sale of artwork on this website.
PNW Tree ID Signs, Ghost Forests Exhibition, array of nine mixed-media signs, recycled oak flooring, India ink, acrylic paint, and lasers, dimensions vary, Trustman Gallery, Simmons University, Boston, Massachusetts, 2022.
Pseudotsuga menziesii, Douglas-fir, has a large range west of the Rocky Mountains, from the northern tip of Vancouver Island down to the coastal and mountain ranges of central California. It prefers elevations from sea level up to 5000 feet, sometimes more. Its needles are spirally arranged, with a slight twist at the base. Its mature cones are tan and have a unique 3-pointed bract that extends beyond the scales which evokes an abstract form that looks vaguely like the tail and hind feet of a frantically scrambling mouse attempting to hide just beneath the scales. Douglas-fir trees yield the most amount of timber in North America, making the Doug-fir one of the most economically important trees in the world. The tree is closely associated with the people and timber industry of the PNW, so it is no wonder that our friend Dougie is the state tree of Oregon, and is still the best-selling wood species at Jerry’s Hardware in Springfield, Oregon
Picea sitchensis, Sitka spruce, occurs within a thin strip on the Pacific Coast of Oregon into Alaska, often only reaching a few miles inland. It is a PNW costal icon, making its home along the shores and inlets of a moss covered, moist landscape. Its stiff and sharp needles are glaucus with two strips of stomata on the underside. The tan colored, medium-sized cones are soft, papery, and pale brown. When dry, these cones make the best, out of tune mini xylophones to run a finger across. The Sitka spruce was a central species of a nearly lost ecosystem, the tidal forest. Today, most of the tidal forests have been logged, diked, and converted to farmland and luxury seaside homes. What little remains of the Sitka spruce forests is a somber testament to Homo sapiens’ collective environmental values.
Other Oregon Coast ghost forests, such the Neskowin Ghost Forest were likely created when the Cascadia subduction earthquake in 1700 AD covered the tidal forest with debris from a massive tsunami.
Pinus sabiniana, gray foothills pine, is endemic to California and the Klamath Mountains eco-region of Oregon. The gray foothills pine can be easily identifiable by its tremendously large cones and long drooping needles. The infamously large cones of the gray foothills pine are specially adapted to the sloped and grassy environment it resides in.
After three to five years of staying on the tree branch, the foothill pine cone will detach and roll downhill (hikers beware). The falling cones are heavy enough to cause injury or death to Homo sapiens and have been nicknamed “widow maker cones” due to fatal tales of backcountry misfortune.
Pinus contorta, lodgepole pine, is a hard pine located from the shore of the Pacific Coast to the PNW sub-alpine mountains. The lodgepole pine can tolerate many harsh conditions, such as clay soils, freezing temperatures, and even the pumice ridden soils of central Oregon which can sometimes reach 140 degrees during the summer (Arno, 2020). Its egg-shaped cones are prickly and serotinous, needing fire to release its seeds. The cones’ size and mass make it a choice selection in the suburban sandlot game known as “pine cone war.” The fire-activated oblong cone is rumored to be the inspiration for the game of “Whack Bat” in the 2009 cult classic film Fantastic Mr. Fox. Due to the Andersonian association, the ‘Whack Bat’ pine strobili are coveted souvenir cones in Hollywood, California. The sign features a billow of smoke as a gentle warning to alert folks that they have entered the potentially dangerous Pinus contorta ‘Whack Bat’ zone. Trail users beware!
Pinus lambertiana, sugar pine, can be found throughout the mountains of Oregon and California in moist environments. Its needles are found in fascicles of 5. The overall form is recognizable for its large crown of majestic outreaching branches. Not only is the sugar pine the largest pine in the world, it also bears the largest cones of all pines, with the largest recorded specimen clocking in at an impressive 22 inches. No fooling! When green, the pendant cones can weigh two to four pounds, making them the weapon of choice for petty squirrels overhead.
There were several uses for the sugar pine. Native peoples ate and harvested the tasty seeds and used them in a variety of ways, including roasting, boiling, baking into cakes, or pulverizing into a nut butter spread. The sweet resin was chewed as gum sparingly due to its laxative qualities (Arno, 2020).
Taxus brevifolia, pacific yew or western yew, is a tree species in the yew family Taxaceae and is native to the Pacific Northwest. It is a small evergreen conifer, thriving in moisture dappled sun light, and tends to take the form of a shrub. With the passing of time, it will eventually take the form of an understory tree, hiding beneath the towering Douglas-firs and western hemlocks. It can be found sparsely in the southern Alaska Panhandle all the way down to the San Francisco Bay area, as well as extending east to the northern Rockies.
The pacific yew houses a legendary poison, which is toxic to humans, especially children. All parts of the tree are toxic, so kindergarteners beware on forest field trips! The yew is known for its small, violently red, berry-like cones also known as an aril. Only the female trees produce these pea-sized poison pills. Each aril contains one toxic seed surrounded by bead-shaped fleshy pulp. The needles are flat, double ranked, and deep green.
The whimsical-looking bark of the pacific yew appears to have leaped straight out of a fairy tale, as it is scaly gray on the outside and bright purple on the inside. During the 1990s the pacific yews’ bark was discovered to house the chemical known as Taxol (or Paclitaxel) that can inhibit ovarian and breast cancers. The chemical was extracted from trees in the Pacific Northwest for roughly ten years before pharmaceutical companies switched to agricultural plantations, later synthesizing the drug (Arno, 2020). This controversial harvest of a seemingly unforgivable poison allowed the shade loving pacific yew to come into the light of popular culture for a few years, helping cancer patients, before fading back into humble obscurity and avoiding prolonged exploitation.
Sources:
Arno, Stephen, and Ramona Hammerly. Northwest Trees. Mountaineer Books. 2020, pp. 30-35, 61-69, 83-91, 101-110, 117-122.
Jensen, Edward. Trees to Know in Oregon. Oregon State University. 2010, pp. 11-13, 20-21, 28-29, 36-37, 42-44, 107-108.
“Pinus strobus.” Edited by Christopher J. Earle, Pinus strobus (Eastern White Pine) description - The Gymnosperm Database, 6, Aug. 2023, Pinus strobus (eastern white pine) description (conifers.org)
“Pinus sabiniana.” Edited by Christopher J. Earle, Pinus sabiniana (Foothills Pine) description - The Gymnosperm Database, 26, Feb. 2023, Pinus sabiniana (gray pine) description - The Gymnosperm Database (conifers.org)
Forest Fashion, Lookout Ed.
Forest Fashion, Lookout Edition, is an ongoing interdisciplinary project by David Buckley Borden and collaborators. The mixed-media series of personal objects explores the “fashions and fashionings” of a backcountry fire lookout tower in the Pacific Northwest. The speculative research-based work critically explores the relationship between the people, place, and practices of Pacific Northwest forests with a pointed focus on wildfire factors at the intersection of culture and ecology.
Forest Fashion, Lookout Edition
Amid forest fires and watering bans, air-quality alerts and atmospheric rivers, we see a new culture arising among people who go hiking in the backcountry of the Pacific Northwest. How might these new folk seek to reconcile past Western land-management practices and contemporary conflicting cultural histories? What timely knowledge might such a society offer in the midst of planetary crisis? In landscapes of rapid change, alongside those who’ve known the land far longer than modernity allows, the goods dreamt up by these Anthropocene wanderers have evolved from speculative niches in academia to a burgeoning bazaar of Pollyanna technologies and nuanced neo-tribal narratives spanning a spectrum from savvy hope to existential despair. Perhaps they signal an emerging reconciliation between conflicting cultural histories of land use in the forested backcountry of the Cascades?
Anthropologists posit that every artifact possesses a cultural backstory legible in design—every stitch, every screw an archive of creativity and folk knowledge. Some of these narratives speak through vagaries of form—the mouth-sized spout on a canteen; the flared axe handle, smoothed and weighted for ergonomically-efficient destruction. Other stories are only revealed upon rigorous research, including the acquisition, restoration, and re-creation of objects long lost or never known by outsiders. In this way, every object in the Forest Fashion collection communicates a story of human creativity, resiliency, and adaptation.
Environmental Wayfinding System
Building off traditional “hobo” pictographs, the Environmental Wayfinding System (EWS) is a reimagined folk communication system that serves as a graphic survival-code for people navigating environmental collapse in the Anthropocene. A living graphic language constantly evolving in response to ecological developments and human understanding, EWS is often informally shared among its users, and has been recorded across North America, ranging from the scorched mountains of the Pacific Northwest, to the desiccated fly-over flats of the Dust Bowl 2.0 region, to the swamped back alleys of American coastal cities, most notably Washington, D.C.
Strong resilient communities share information freely. So, it is not surprising to see EWS symbols incorporated into a remarkable range of handmade objects as a means to educate others within the community. Documented examples of EWS objects include camping equipment, hiking gear, heirloom quilts, furniture, hand tools, and even toys and clothing for children. The Forest Fashion, Lookout Edition collection is a prime example of a wonderfully diverse collection of EWS inspired material culture.
Although there is a growing movement to standardize the EWS phenomenon, in an effort to make it more accessible across all resiliency-indexed social strata, EWS is a vernacular graphic language that varies from one ecological region to the next, influenced by local environmental legacies and cultural practices. The EWS symbols associated with the Forest Fashion, Lookout Edition reflects the genius loci of the Pacific Northwest Forests.
Salvage Cut Cookie Quilt
Contrary to popular belief, a warm quilt for a warming planet is an essential item for survival. Made of lightweight breathable cotton with a petrol-based, highly flammable batting fill, the Salvage Cut Cookie Quilt provides warmth and comfort for a good night’s rest. It doesn’t quite pack down to inch by inch by inch like those newfangled Prada sleeping bags, and it weighs half a ton. But this cozy quilt sets the stage for bedtime ghost stories and brings a taste of home to the remote mountaintop.
This quilt is adorned with silkscreened prints of a 40-year-old Douglas-fir tree cookie rescued from a Wildlife Habitat Restoration Unit (a product of the Northwest Forest Plan, May 1994) on BLM land in Lane County, Oregon. The red stitch work reflects common, and a couple uncommon, cut patterns of milled plantation timber. This quilt also features hand-stitched graphic language from the Environmental Wayfinding System, indicating the quilt makers are attuned to a network of people collectively navigating environmental collapse within their local communities.
Salvage Cut Cookie Quilt, silkscreened duck canvas, cotton fabric, and thread, 40 x 80 inches, 2022. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Helen Popinchalk, Madison Sanders, and Nancy Silvers.
EWS Map Case
The EWS Map-N-Chart Case is a faithful reproduction of an iconic map case favored by long-distance through-hikers, wildfire fighters, and USFS lookout personnel. As such, the waxed-canvas case is almost waterproof and offers two see-through UV-resistant polymer windows for viewing maps, reports, conversion tables, and EWS charts. The map case also boasts an internal pocket for essential Rite in the Rain field books, and two felt hoops: one for a dry-erase marker and the other for an EWS grease pencil. The case features four steel D-rings for easily lashing the case to shoulder straps, backpacks, pack mules, or a low-torque electric-powered ATV.
EWS Map-N-Chart Case, cotton canvas, felt, museum board, Canadian paper pulp, polymer, thread, 13 x 15 x 2 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Nancy Silvers.
Mega Drought Dehydration Canteen Gauge
This Mega Drought Dehydration Gauge Canteen belonged to a young scientist who studied snowpack modeling for flood forecasting, water resource management, and climate studies. The scientist was lost in an avalanche during the late winter 2021 field research season in the Cascades of Southern Washington. His hand-engraved canteen was found the following summer off the coast of Sendai in the Tohoku region of Northeast Japan. At the time of retrieval, the canteen contents still smelled of sour coffee.
Mega Drought Dehydration Canteen, etched aluminum surplus canteen (40-ounce), enamel paint, para cord, 9 x 5 x 3, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Gallows Humor, Blake Schouten, and Nancy Silvers.
Tandem Timber Haul Straps
This pair of moving straps, along with other two-person tools, such as the “misery whip” saw, are categorically “slow and low” impact logging tools. This functional pair of straps are “faithful reproductions,” on loan from the Fancy Silverston. Nonetheless, they are prime examples of early timber technology. Interestingly, the 1/8” satin-stitch EWS symbols spin contrasting tales of radical environmental protection (top strap) and tough guy timber corporate testimony (bottom strap). These particular EWS symbols are a lovely example of critical, narrative-driven, material culture. Conceptually, the pair of haul straps seem to communicate an opposing, yet balanced, sustainable collaborative forest management practice. This fact makes this EWS themed artifact of particular interest to both enviros and timber beasts alike.
Tandem Timber Haul Straps, heavy-weight cotton canvas, wood handles, para cord, thread, 9 x 48 x 1 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Blake Schouten, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Escher Vierck.
Cathartes Aura Cooling Bag
Most water is not for drinking. This curious-looking canvas handbag is modeled off antique water bags that were once used at remote logging sites for cooling down overheated horses, oxen, and “steam donkeys.” Loggers would fill the water bags with cold mountain run-off and then cache the bloated bags in snow pack. During late summer heat waves, these water bags were also administered to loggers suffering from sunstroke or “Vita-D Poisoning,” as the condition was known by some PNW sawyers. The abstract graphic on the bag’s face captures the likeness of the breezy cleaner, Cathartes aura, commonly known as the turkey vulture. The vulture image was intended to prompt meditations on high atmospheric heat, low water levels, and a short life punctuated by a long death.
Cathartes Aura Cooling Bag, cotton canvas, upcycled tin spout and clasp, recycled plastic cap, thread, para cord, and wood handle, 12 x 10 x .25 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Asa DeWitt, Nancy Silvers, and Sabine Winkler.
Commemorative Chainsaw Oil Cans
These small oil cans, a rare find to say the least, were discovered in the McKenzie River Ranger Station parking lot on Route 126 in Blue River, OR in the winter of 2023. The hand-etched chainsaw oil cans appear to be a logger’s commemoration of successful (profitable and injury-free) Holiday Farm Fire salvage logging operations. The customized objects are a prime example of “Lumberjack Art,” a material culture term used by anthropologists to describe objects made from tools and debris in the context of logging operations, especially in the off hours at logging camps. This class of folk art has become increasingly prized by collectors as traditional saws, public working forests, and the working class that cut these forests dwindle with each passing harvest season.
Although it looks like a mangled work glove, the organic figure-ground form (Image A) captures the geographic extent of the 2020 Holiday Farm Fire, AKA the 200430 wildfire incident according to the United States Forest Service. A third of this etched map is crosshatched in red paint to represent the total area of salvage logging operations within the boundaries of the Holiday Farm Fire. On the flip side of the etched can (Image B) is the wildfire start date, 200430 incident number, and the words, “Owl Gulch Salv.” Researchers surmise that the can’s maker participated in the “Owl Gulch” salvage logging operation. The can’s screw tops feature a red saw-scared stump and a black nurse stump with two distinct emerging evergreen saplings.
Commemorative Oil Cans, etched steel, dirt, blood, and paint, 2.5 x 2.5 x 1 inch, 2023. Collaborators: Rachel Benbrook, David Buckley Borden, and Blake Schouten.
Hot Log Mitts
This pair of restored Hot Log Mitts were discovered in 2022 in a long-forgotten storage space in an old dairy barn just outside of Tillamook, Oregon. These emergency fire mitts are remarkably bulky, but necessary when surprise wildfires douse any superficial notions of fashion. The mitt’s off-white color initially puzzled design-researchers. They now believe the mitts were made from light-colored material in order to highlight any burn holes or tears in the flame-retardant wool. Yet others posit the white material was used in the spirit of the old saying; “Good wood is the wood you got.”
Hot Log Mitts, cotton canvas, felt, thread, wood dowels, insulated with common sense and precaution, 8 x 15 x 4 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Sabine Winkler, and Nancy Silvers.
Lil’ Hot Log Mitts
A smaller (baby-sized) pair of Lil’ Hot Log Mitts were also discovered in a nearby hops barn and reunited with the larger parent pair in 2023. The two sets of mitts appear to be made by the same crafts-person, in terms of material, stitch work, and design details, for example, the “Right” and “Left” scripted pull-on tabs found on each pair of mitts.
Lil’ Hot Log Mitts, cotton canvas, felt, thread, wood dowels, insulated with common sense and parental care, 2 x 3 x 8 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Sabine Winkler, and Nancy Silvers.
Comfy Camp Slippers
The Comfy Camp Slippers are an interesting modern hybrid of vintage trail slippers, house shoes, and crocs. Some lookout towers and cabs are a “please, take off your shoes” sort of space. In the ol’ tradition of back-40 thrift, these comfy camp slippers (size 9.5 women’s, wide) appear to be fashioned from materials on hand (felt, cardboard, and a decommissioned fireproof personnel tent). These slippers keep toes toasty (but not toasted) when the sun sets, temp drops, and the “owl coos for yous.” The top-side satin-stitched “Comfy Camp” EWS symbol makes these hand-fashioned slippers a bona fide, coveted luxury accessory in any fashion camp, high or low.
Comfy Camp Slippers, up-cycled fireproof wildfire fighter tent, felt, thread, museum board, 3 x 4 x 9 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Nancy Silvers, and Sabine Winkler.
Lil’ Boo Comfy Camp Slippers
Little boos need creature comforts too. These kiddie-sized T-3 Comfy Camp Slippers are the ultimate in fawning camp-parenting.
Lil’ Boo Comfy Camp Slippers, up-cycled fireproof wildfire fighter tent lining, felt, thread, museum board, size T3, 2 x 3 x 5 inches, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Nancy Silvers, and Sabine Winkler.
Doug-Fir Cookie Eye Pillow
How can lookouts under the threat of wildfires sleep at night? It has something to do with soft cotton eye pillows and stiff nightcaps in little tin cups. The Douglas Cookie Eye Pillow also works wonders for arboreal dreams of Oregon plums and sugar pine cone drops on those bright full moon nights.
Doug-Fir Cookie Eye Pillow, cotton canvas, elastic band, thread, and patience, 7 x 4 x .125 inches, 2022. Collaborators, David Buckley Borden, Nancy Silvers, and Sabine Winkler.
Five Gallon Forest Flask
The Five Gallon Forest Flask can be a wildfire lookout’s savior. This particular customized fire extinguisher backpack features a five-gallon capacity chrome-plated aluminum tank, remote heat and humidity sensors, OTF knife with clip, and a ventilated air-cooled backrest. The brass slide-action pump is hand-operated and paired with a rugged thirty-inch double-braided oil-resistant hose. The tank’s carrying handle has clamps for securing the pump, and holes for attaching heavy-duty canvas shoulder straps. Apparently, shoulder straps were available in “suspender red” cotton webbing or off-white cotton canvas with felt padding for shoulder comfort. The high-viz EWS graphic on the backpack is equal parts safety feature and district statement to which the Forest Flask belonged. This Forest Flask has no apparent makers-mark, nor agency brand.
Five Gallon Forest Flask, 2 oz. etched aluminum 5 gal. canister, rubber hose, metal knife, bronze water pump, tin telescopic antenna, sensors, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, 7 x 12 x 15 inches, 13 lbs. net weight, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Blake Schouten, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Escher Vierck.
Trapper Keeper
The Trapper Keeper, packed with a variety of field tech, survival gear, and choice creature comforts, is essential to support a lookout’s long trek to remote destinations such as the supply shed, bunkhouse, weather station, and the wildfire lookout tower itself. The Trapper Keeper is not a backpack, it’s a mobile support system for backcountry lookout-tower personnel. This particular pack is a modification of the trad government-issued wood-frame design. This upgrade features tactical pockets for bodily autonomy, padded chest straps for durability, a plywood frame for easy peel-and-burn kindling, a wet tube for bare-root saplings, and a reinforced cotton lining featuring a decoded Environmental Wayfinding System print.
Trapper Keeper, mixed-media backpack, cotton canvas, silkscreened muslin, furniture plywood, plastic tubes, tree saplings, paracord, rubber band, nickel grommets, and assorted thread and hardware, dimensions vary on payload but generally 8 x 20 x 30 inches, 2022. Collaborators
The Forest Fashion collaboration was funded by design-research grants to David Buckley Borden as part of his Fuller Design Fellowship at the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes at the University of Oregon. Additional financial support for project fabrication was provided by the Oregon State University Foundation’s Andrews Fund as part of Borden’s design research residency at the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest. Collaborating landscape architecture graduate students at the University of Oregon were also funded through the sale of artwork on this website.
Nancy Silvers’ Trapper Keeper collaboration was funded by the Ford Family Foundation through a grant to David Buckley Borden and Colin Ives via the Center for Art Research at the University of Oregon.
Forest Fashion collaborators: Rachel Benbrook, William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Asa DeWitt, Isaac Martinotti, Helen Popinchalk, Kennedy Rauh, Nancy Silvers, Madison Sanders, Blake Schouten, Ian Escher Vierck, and Sabine Winkler.
Arboreal Goth Cones
Collections are common across all cultures, especially in the West in the waning age of capitalism. Collections of cultural objects (things made by Homo sapiens) can represent conspicuous consumption, wealth, and excess, and have so since the rise of the Middle Ages’ merchant class. On the other hand, botanical collections can represent a rich knowledge and pedagogical opportunity for environmental understanding; specifically, the knowledge of endemic plant narratives and natural histories that are embodied in both individual specimens and the collection as a whole.
The Arboreal Goth Cone Collection took years of plant expedition planning, miserable field research management, grueling grant writing, and tedious lab work. Still, the toil has been rewarded—this cone collection captures some of the most extraordinary Pinus sabiniana (foothill pine) cultivars ever created. The significance of the collection is more than a curated group of freakish gymnosperms and arboreal oddities, but a rich volume of ecological lore articulating the complicated relationship between Homo sapiens and the flora of North America. Moreover, this collection is outstanding in that many of the cultivars were created with the intention of profit and material gain at the expense of native cone-bearing species—a monstrous motivation that is truly ghoulish in the context of our degraded global ecosystem.
Every specimen in the Arboreal Goth Cone Collection is no mere cone, but a story of evolution, adaptation, and resiliency. A resiliency that is ever more remarkable, and frankly worthy of scholarly documentation, in the contemporary context of our shrinking biota. The cones featured in this publication have been curated to share the incredible stories of the cones’ evolution, the trees that bore them, and the cultural forces that brought them into being.
This work was funded by design-research grants to David Buckley Borden as part of his Fuller Design Fellowship at the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes at the University of Oregon. Additional financial support for project fabrication was provided by the Oregon State University Foundation’s Andrews Fund as part of Borden’s design-research residency at the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest. Collaborating landscape architecture graduate students at the University of Oregon were also funded through the sale of artwork on this website.
Pinus sabiniana ‘Impaler,’ commonly known as the “river pike pine” has a medium-to-large-sized cone. It is found in cool riparian valley systems and is associated with river log drives of the 19th and 20th Century lumber trade in North America. Notwithstanding its industrial past, the tree’s iconic cone is prized by tree huggers for its sharp uni-terminal point. The pike tip is covered in a red macro-plastic cap per the Gothic Herbarium safety code.
Fun Fact: A Pinus sabiniana ‘Impaler,’ can be seen on the fireplace mantel in the background in the famous “familial crisis” scene in the 1971 film, Sometimes a Great Notion, starring Paul Newman and Henry Fonda.
Pinus sabiniana ‘Barbus,’ commonly known as the “barb pine” or “sloth hooker,” is considered to be an arboreal anachronism. The umbos of the cone evolved along with the giant ground sloths, including Megalonyx, who were widespread in North America up to the Wisconsin Ice Age. The barbed pine cone adapted to attach to the sloth’s woolly coat in order to spread its seeds over a long-range as the sloth would walk great distances in search of food.
As land sloths slowly went extinct, early Homo sapiens learned to cultivate the barbed pine specimen for its unique Velcro-like characteristic and commonly used the clingy cone as a practical joke during tedious hunting and gathering trips.
Pinus sabiniana ‘Grapnelia,’ commonly known as a “grappling foothills pine” or “gray batman hook pine” is a large-sized pine tree endemic to California. The tree is easily identified by its sharp spiny cone and grappling hook-like terminus. The cone, about the size of an American football, is spiked, relatively heavy (up to three kilograms), and is a known “public safety hazard” during even the most mild wind events. Despite the cone’s dangerous reputation as a “widower,” dendrophiles are still seduced by the cone’s remarkable gnarly appearance and size.
Note: Red safety covers have been placed on sharp terminus tips per public health regulations of the state of California.
Pinus sabiniana ‘Forksis,’ commonly known as the “pitch fork pine” is a small-to-medium-sized pine. It is native to western North America, primarily from British Columbia to northern California and as far east as Idaho. It is found in environments that most other tree species find unsuitable for growth, such as acidic, sandy soils, not to mention disturbed landscapes of political unrest and cultural upheaval.
Pinus sabiniana ‘Whack Bat,’ commonly known as the “grenade pine,” is a common seed bomb cultivar found west of the Rocky Mountains. The fire-activated oblong cone with its single stem pin and large ring is rumored to be the inspiration for the fictitious game of “Whack Bat” in the 2009 cult classic film Fantastic Mr. Fox. As a result of the Andersonian association, the ‘Whack Bat’ pine strobili are bona fide trophy cones.
Caveat emptor: unscrupulous cone traders have been known to pass off the common “ringworm pine” cone (easily identified by its double stem pin) for the premium price of a ‘Whack Bat’ cone. Nihilo sanctum estne?
Pinus sabiniana ‘Tines,’ commonly known as the “spork pine,” is a medium-to-large sized pine cultivated for its tolerance of dry urban environments. It was specifically cultivated for the North American market and is typically found to the left of the feeble plastic knife.
Pinus sabiniana, ‘David’s Bowie,’ commonly known as a “bowie knife pine”, or simply, “knife pine,” is a large pine prized for its sharp pointed cone and cutting edge. The bowie cone has an uncanny resemblance to the Americana hunting knife of the same name. The red safety cap has been removed for this photograph in order to highlight the potentially lethal tip of this bizarre Pinus sabiniana cultivar. The cone is a colorful pop in any teenager’s pine cone war chest of crude blades and spent shells from the local sand pit range.
Pinus sabiniana ‘Anglerus,’ commonly known as the “lure pine,” is a medium-sized pine cultivated for its cone’s curious appearance of an oversized fly fishing lure. Today, the prized cones can be found in glass display cases in high-dollar eco-tourism hot spots, i.e., Jackson, WY. The dyed turkey feathers in the lure cone (photograph above) are an after-market phenomenon that is generally frowned upon within serious collector circles. Other popular materials for customizing cones include: chicken contour feathers, bison pantaloon hairs, and ungulate vibrissae, especially Quey brand elk whiskers.
The Arboreal Goth Cone Collection is a speculative-design project exploring gothic hybrids of ecology, industrial material, collector culture, and late-capitalism in North America. The original “art cone” concept stems from an obscure pine cone artform practiced by USFS lookout personnel stationed in wildfire watchtowers throughout the Pacific Northwest.
The mixed-media objects are created from old logging tools, foothill pine cones, macro plastics, oil-based paints, and natural oils and waxes. Dimensions vary by cultivar, 2023-2024.
Arboreal Goth Cone Collection collaborators: Vinnie Arnone, William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Mike Demaggio, Adam DeSorbo, Asa DeWitt, Ashley Ferguson, Helen Popinchalk, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Escher Vierck.
Photography by Adam DeSorbo.
The complete catalog of the Arboreal Goth Cone Collection is available from the Unfinished Book Bureau and can be purchased here.
Rad Colllab Flags
For those about to collaborate, we salute you!
Every glorious collective endeavor deserves its own flag. This fact that does not need to be cited, claimed, nor debated in any degree of detail.
The ongoing Rad Collab Flag project proclaims the power of collective creativity by David Buckley Borden and collaborators in an ongoing series of handmade large-format flags. Each Rad Collab Flag is equal parts graphic representation, creative celebration, project commemoration, and collective recognition. With a few choice colors, bold forms, and left-handed graphic jabs, each flag captures the singular spirit of its respective collaboration.
Past Rad Collab Flags were funded by the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes at the University of Oregon, the Oregon State University Foundation’s Andrews Fund, and the sale of vexillography artwork on this website.
Rachel Carlson sports the Science or Death Flag, which is equipped with common field research tech to celebrate the critical collaboration between science and society.
The Science or Death Flag was inspired by three years of critical conversations of concern for the PNW ecosystems and the populations that call them home. The field equipment (heat guarded sensor, anemometer, and thermometer) symbolizes a culture of rigorous research and knowledge. The Gothic flourishes and the six stripes in the canton are a public acknowledgment of the ongoing sixth mass extinction.
Science or Death Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2021. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Michael Demaggio, and Ian Escher Vierck.
Sabine Winkler presents a high-viz EWS Camp Flag, in the classic black-white-red colorway, to announce a welcoming "safe camp" amidst local environmental collapse.
The EWS Camp Flag features a not-so-secret message in the graphic-folk language known as the Environmental Wayfinding System (EWS). This fire-retardant fabric flag is flown outside community centers, public spaces, open-homes, and backwoods camps to welcome folks to learn about EWS and how to use the environmental communication tool to navigate challenges on the path to global ecological collapse. All are welcome.
EWS Camp Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Sabine Winkler.
Ed Abby waves a Collective Action Power Flag as an urgent call for creativity-powered collaborative action.
Collective Action Power Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jack K. Byers, and Asa DeWitt.
Charles Young presents the Lame Duck Flag and an aggressive stance against invasive species along the Willamette River in Eugene, Oregon.
Lame Duck Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2021. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Michael Demaggio, and Ian Escher Vierck.
Ashley Ferguson captures the industrious Castor canadensis spirit with the PNW Eco Engineer Flag.
Eco Engineer Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2023. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Michael Demaggio, and Sabine Winkler.
Julia Butterfly Hill stands tall to protect and to serve trees with the 44th Regiment Tree Guard Flag in hand.
44th Regiment Tree Guard Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2021. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Sabine Winkler, and Ian Escher Vierck.
Aldo Leopold honors the Hot Ashes for Trees Flag, in deference to the never-ending cycle of wildfire ecology within the PNW.
Hot Ashes for Trees Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2024. Collaborators: Jackie Barry, David Buckley Borden, Michael Demaggio, and Sabine Winkler.
Winona LaDuke channels the Ride the Lightning Flag to serve as a towering lightning rod for environmental justice.
Ride the Lightning Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2021. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, and Sabine Winkler.
John Muir was a goth and has the Arboreal Gothique Flag to prove it.
Arboreal Goth Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2023. Collaborators: Vinnie Arnone, David Buckley Borden, and Asa DeWitt.
Nancy Silvers wrestles the Hazardous Monkey Flag to give voice to the latent activist in all of us.
The Hazardous Monkey Flag captures the spirit of the Enviro Barn Quilt project with a remix of graphic traditions from quilt blocks, hazardous-material signs, and taxidermy. The “monkey wrench” quilt block design (made from deconstructed hazardous-warning signs) radically screams for change. The layered graphic also slyly captures an abstract bear skin rug found in corporate cave dwellings of yore.
Hazardous Monkey Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2024. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Ashley Ferguson, and Sabine Winkler.
Secret Seeds
The Secret Seeds project sets its sights on cultural resilience through the critical lens of grassroots “natural defense systems.” The Borden Boys design-research team and project funders are currently in deliberation with natural defense authorities and will deliver a public notice upon a satisfactory balance of environmental impact, personal accountability, public responsibility, and state authority. That said, despite having a trifecta of rad collab flags, the green-op project is temporarily paused, and consequently will remain classified as a Special Access Program until further notice.
In the bureaucratic meantime, grassroots fundraising efforts will continue to support collective action at the local level for this environmental advocacy project. Folks can support the cause and purchase fundraising silkscreen prints and bandanas here.
Current collaborators: Vincent Arnone, Christian Delano Borden, David Buckley Borden, Ashley Ferguson, and Michael Dimaggio.
Secret Seed No. 41, sugar pine cone, glass veggie canning jar, recycled metal “Big Stinky Fly Trap” funnel, acrylic paint, 3.5 x 3.5 x 9 inches, 2024.
Drop Seeds Bandana, 20 x 20 inches, two-color ink on white, or golden yellow cotton, made-in-the-USA bandana, 2023. Collaborators: Vinnie Arnone and David Buckley Borden.
Secret Seed Flags: Vive Vive, Drop Seeds, and Less Assholes (from left to right), marine grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2023-2024. Collaborators: Vinnie Arnone, David Buckley Borden, Mike Demaggio, and Ashley Ferguson.
Hemlock Hospice Trail
Hemlock Hospice; landscape ecology, art, and design
Location: Harvard Forest, Petersham, Massachusetts, USA
Exhibition Run: October 7, 2017 to November 18, 2018.
Hemlock Hospice was a year-long, art-based interpretive trail by David Buckley Borden, Aaron M. Ellison, and their team of interdisciplinary collaborators. This immersive site-specific science-communication project told the story of the ongoing demise of the eastern hemlock tree at the hands (and mouth) of a tiny aphid-like insect, the hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) from Asia. Scientists project that the hemlock forests in Massachusetts will functionally disappear by 2025. While telling the story of the loss of eastern hemlock, the project addressed larger issues of climate change, human impact, and the future of New England forests.
David Buckley Borden, an interdisciplinary artist and designer, was in residence at the Harvard Forest for a year as a 2016/2017 Charles Bullard Fellow in Forest Research. During that period, he collaborated with Harvard scientists on interdisciplinary art-design-science communication projects involving landscape installations and art-based interpretive trail design. The Hemlock Hospice installation was created in collaboration with Senior Ecologist Aaron Ellison, and designed to communicate the latest scientific research on eastern hemlock and HWA at Harvard University’s center for forest research and education. Hemlock Hospice featured 18 sculptures installed on an interpretative trail through a nearly 200-year-old grove of hemlocks of Harvard Forest.
Says Borden, “Artists and designers can play a unique role in communicating the reality of science. As environmental challenges become more critical, scientists are increasingly asked to provide vital information to policy makers, community groups, and individuals. During my time as a Bullard Fellow I answered the question ‘How can art and design support science communication to foster cultural cohesion around ecological issues and help inform ecology-minded decision making.’”
“A field-based installation that blends science, art, and design, Hemlock Hospice respects the eastern hemlock and its ecological role as a foundation forest species; promotes an understanding of the adelgid; and encourages empathetic conversations among all the sustainers of and caregivers for our forests—ecologists and artists, foresters and journalists, naturalists and citizens—while fostering social cohesion around ecological issues,” adds Ellison. “As a scientist, I study how our forests may respond to the loss of this ‘foundation’ tree species,” he continues. “As a human being, I cry, I mourn, and I look to the future for hope. David’s installation tells the story of the hemlock in a new way, communicating why so many scientists and poets care about it, and what their plight tells us about the future of our environment.”
While the Hemlock Hospice trail took visitors on a journey of the disappearance of a species at the Harvard Forest, an accompanying exhibition inside the Fisher Museum curated by Penelope Taylor extended the story of the Museum’s famous dioramas with a collection of Borden’s silkscreen prints, illustrations, and art-objects created collaboratively as part of his Fellowship.
Both Hemlock Hospice and the museum exhibition were on display through November 2018; together, they imagined a future ecology supported by a new creative wave of interdisciplinary science-communication.
The interdisciplinary Hemlock Hospice project was made possible by both leading Harvard scientists and an A-team of creative professionals with a wonderfully diverse set of skills and interests. The year-long project was collaborative in intent, process, and production. Beyond the artwork itself, the final project can be viewed as an allied exhibition of science, art, and design talent from across the country. Learn more about the Hemlock Hospice collaborators here.
If you would like to join the conversation and help spread the word about how designers, scientists, and communities can work together to play an active role in imagining and creating a sustainable environment for our future, please reach out to David Buckley Borden and Dr. Aaron M Ellison at borden@fas.harvard.edu and aellison@fas.harvard.edu.
David Buckley Borden’s work was supported by a Charles Bullard Fellowship in Forest Research at Harvard University. Additional financial support for design and fabrication was provided by the Harvard Forest through research grants to David R. Foster and Aaron M, Ellison from the U.S. National Science Foundation (DEB 12-37491 and DBI 14-59519).
Wayfinding Barrier, No. 2, installation at Harvard Forest, 2 x 3.5 x 4 feet, wood, acrylic paint, vinyl, sheet metal, aluminum tape, and recycled ant nests and specimen box, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jack Byers, Dr. Aaron Ellison, and Salua Rivero.
Hemlock Memorial Shed, installation at Harvard Forest, 8 x 8 x 9 feet, wood, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Dr. Aaron Ellison, and Lisa Q Ward.
Sixth Extinction Flag, installation at Harvard Forest, 5 x 5 feet, canvas, thread, nylon rope, and grommets, 2017. Collaborators: Jackie Barry, David Buckley Borden, and Dr. Aaron Ellison. Photography by Salua Rivero.
Fast Forward Futures, installation at Harvard Forest, 4 x 8 x 26 feet, wood, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jack Byers, Dr. Aaron Ellison, Salvador Jiménez-Flores, and Salua Rivero.
Fast Forward Futures, installation at Harvard Forest, 4 x 8 x 26 feet, wood, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jack Byers, Dr. Aaron Ellison, Salvador Jiménez-Flores, and Salua Rivero.
Insect Landing, installation at Harvard Forest, 4 x 6 x 6 feet, recycled wood, and acrylic paint, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Dr. Aaron Ellison, Salvador Jiménez-Flores, CC McGregor, Patrick Moore, Salua Rivero, and Lisa Q Ward.
Double Assault, installation at Harvard Forest, dimensions variable, acrylic paint, wood, vintage buzzsaws, and assorted hardware, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley, Jack Byers, Dr. Aaron Ellison, and Salua Rivero.
Bio Resource Plug, installation at Harvard Forest, 1.25 x 1.25 x 2.5 feet, wood, acrylic paint, steel., and PVC tubing, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and blacksmith Brian Hall. Photography by Neil Pederson.
“Exchange Tree,” installation at Harvard Forest, 8 x 10 x 12.5 feet, wood and acrylic paint, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Dr. Aaron Ellison, Salvador Jiménez-Flores, and Salua Rivero.
Hemlock Hospice Tour Helmets. installation at Harvard Forest, customized safety helmets, 2017. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jack K Byers, Dr. Aaron Ellison, and Salua Rivero. Photography by Patrick Moore.
Landscape Makers
Landscape Makers, LaVerne Krause Gallery, Lawrence Hall, University of Oregon. January 29th to Feb 3rd, 2022.
Exhibition Collaborators: William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Ignacio Lopez Buson, Hannah Chapin, Tom Coates, Seth Eddy, Michael Geffel, Celia Hensey, Grant Olson, Abby Pierce, Kennedy Rauh, Masayo Simon, Nancy Silvers, Dr. Fred Swanson, and Ian Vierck.
Exhibition photography courtesy of Ignacio Lopez Buson of MAPS (Methods for the Architecture of Patterns and Systems).
The Landscape Makers exhibition was a maker-driven art + design event featuring the work of Fuller Design Fellow David Buckley Borden and his collaborative team of Studio Fellows. The landscape-inspired work explored cultural narratives of PNW forests through interior installation, design objects, and interdisciplinary environmental-communication. The exhibition featured refined design-research work created by Borden and a team of artists, designers, and select graduate students enrolled in the Master of Landscape Architecture Program at the University of Oregon.
The public exhibition was also a snapshot of an ongoing creative project, Lookout Landscape, a multi-site interdisciplinary creative project with the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes, the Center for Art Research, the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest, and the Spring Creek Project for Ideas, Nature, and the Written Word. The Lookout Landscape project is an emerging collaborative, community-driven endeavor led by David Buckley Borden and Colin Ives, as CFAR Affiliate facilitators. The project uses an environmental lens to highlight the maker-culture within the state of Oregon by including the process and input from a variety of creative individuals, ranging from forestry research scientists to indigenous land stewards from both local and regional communities.
Enviro Barn Quilts
Recycled aluminum hazardous-material signs, primed wood siding, wood glue, and sheet metal screws, 2021-2022. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Seth Eddy, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Vierck.
This series of large-format mixed-media barn quilt designs are inspired by regional Pacific Northwest narratives in response to the 2020 wildfire season, which was noted as one of the most extensive seasons on record. The 44-inch square quilt-block patterns are created from recycled hazardous material signs to communicate community memorial, testament, critique, respect, and celebration of wildfires as an ecological phenomenon. While telling the story of the 2020 fire season, the work addresses larger issues of climate change, human impact, industry, personal experience, community activism, and the future of wildfire response in the PNW forests.
Some quilt designs, such as Monkey Wrench and Burnt Bear Paw (left and right) are reinterpreted traditional folk patterns that continue to resonate with contemporary environmental narratives. Other designs were created anew in response to local community chronicles. These neo-folk pieces, with titles such as Wind Event, Back-40 Block Aid, and Chevron Fossus Mortis, push the folk tradition into new narrative territory as humanity reckons with novel ecological challenges brought on by climate change.
Make Your Own Haz-Mat Quilt
One-inch plywood, aluminum haz-mat signs, bullseye primer, and assorted hardware, 60” x 60”, 2021-2022. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Nancy Silvers.
Shared personal knowledge and familial storytelling is the creative crux of folk design tradition, including quilt-pattern making. The Make Your Own Haz-Mat Quilt piece built off this tradition of voice and creative empowerment to function as a low-tech interactive work that invited gallery guests to create their own designs by manipulating a grid of sixteen independent flip placards. Each flip placard included 15 haz-mat sign options, giving users 240 permutations to play with in the creation of their own personal environmental statement.
Tree Guard No. 1.
Full-scale prototype of modular landscape installation element, nominal 4” x 6” timbers, structural screws, primer, acrylic paint, aspirin, and band aids, 7’ x 14’ x 18’, 2022. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Vierck.
Tree Guard No. 01 is a provocative pop-dipped reinterpretation of the urban steel tree guard. The modular prototype is inspired by timber-framed barn-building and high-visibility destruction/construction barriers. This dramatic tree guard is intended to capture human attention, land stewards’ imagination, and the value of the potential tree within it. Although the tree guard is displayed in a gallery setting without the central tree, the prototype is being further developed as a series of public landscape installations on contested land under threat of development in Eugene, OR. The Tree Guard No. 01 was created in the spirit of Jack K. Byer’s mantra, “Protect to Study; Study to Protect.”
Buffalo Plaid Panels
Vernacular mixed-media panels, wood, marine-grade polymer canvas, and assorted hardware, 44” x 44” each, 2021. Collaborators: William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Kennedy Rauh, and Ian Vierck.
Every landscape has an association with a material culture. How can a material, be it from nature or the human hand, influence the cultural identity of a people, their sense of place, and their land-use practice?
Buffalo Plaid or Buffalo Check is a plaid pattern created by large blocks formed by the intersection of two different color fabrics, typically red and black. The tartan-inspired plaid (the Gaelic for pladjer) pattern was introduced to North America by Jock McCluskey, a descendant of Rob Roy, who traded the heavy Scottish blankets with Native Americans and other European trappers. The iconic pattern is now synonymous with both the timber industry and outdoor recreation in Oregon forests.
The four iconic “Buffalo Plaid” inspired patterns (two-inch, one-inch, glitch, and bespoke) were handwoven with marine-grade fabric by Kennedy Rauh. The fabric patterns were then framed with wood CNC-cut panels. The graphic icons within the panels are representations of North America’s classic ecological engineers, the bison and beaver.
Beyond Scaled-Models for Buffalo Plaid Panels. Lookout Landscape Studio Fellows, Overlook Field School alums, MLA graduate students, and Landscape Makers (left to right); William Bonner, Hannah Chapin, Kennedy Rauh, and Ian Vierck.
Carbon Storage Shed
Woodshed installation, cheap lumber, split firewood, haz-mat signs, primer, acrylic paint, and assorted hardware, 44” x 48” x 64”, 2022. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Hannah Chapin, Kennedy Rauh, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Vierck.
The Carbon Storage Woodshed is a modest reminder that wood (both dead and alive) plays a proactive role in the process of capturing and storing atmospheric carbon dioxide. The shed is also a pointed prompt that calls on the timber industry to play a landscape stewardship role in carbon sequestration of the Pacific Northwest forest ecosystem.
PNW Forest Flags
PNW Forest Flag display, marine-grade canvas, paracord, cedar poles, and antique logging tools (river pike, pike and hook, and bark spud), dimensions variable, 2021-2022. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Hannah Chapin, Michael Demaggio, and Ian Vierck.
This series of large-format 3’ x 5’ flags captures a few principle interests (wildfire ecology, wildlife habitat, and science in society) at the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest in Blue River, Oregon. The PNW Forest Flags are an extension of a series of collaborative fabric works by Boston-based artist Michael Demaggio and David Buckley Borden. This particular vexillography series began during Borden’s Overlook Field School Artist Residency in the summer of 2021. The ongoing collaborative environmental flag project continued with additional creative contributions from Hannah Chapin, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Vierck.
Light-Wood Boombox; Gentrification No. 02.
Yellow pine wood, blue tarp, marine-grade polymer canvas, brooder lamp, 40-watt bulb, paint, vinyl, and assorted hardware 46” x 46”, 2021. Collaborators: William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Pat Falco, Kennedy Rauh, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Vierck.
Light box designs were used to explore local environmental issues, rural and urban. These prototype studies also tested material-interplay between wood, fabric, graphics, color, and lighting.
Many thanks to Tom Coates for his guidance and assistance with our CNC robot collaborators on the series.
Light-Wood Boombox; US Ecology Distress Sign
Wood, marine-grade fabric, brooder lamps, paint, and assorted hardware, 46” x 46”, 2021. Collaborators: William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Pat Falco, Kennedy Rauh, and Nancy Silvers, 2021-2022.
Community Wildfire Tool Shed
Vernacular architecture installation, wood, marine-grade canvas, hardware, and miscellaneous forestry, safety, and firefighting tools, 4’ x 3' x 5’, 2022. Collaborators: William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Hannah Chapin, Michael Geffel, Kennedy Rauh, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Vierck.
The Community Wildfire Tool Shed was an experimental re-interpretation of a backcountry USFS storage shed. The shed presents both traditional tools and speculative design solutions for community firefighting, both past and future. The modular paneled structure was a creative exploration working toward the design and fabrication of a full-scale lookout tower for the Lookout Landscape project with the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest et al.
Loo with the View
Interior architecture installation, CNC-cut wood panels, marine-grade fabric, upcycled wind gauges, recycled hazardous-material signs, vintage fire warden phone, paint, assorted hardware, and media players with projectors, 11’ x 11.5’ x 11.5’, 2022. Collaborators: William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Hannah Chapin, Kennedy Rauh, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Vierck.
Hybrid landscape “architecture” merging iconic design elements of a backcountry open-door outhouse and vintage PNW wildfire lookout tower. This full-scale prototype was a design opportunity to explore modular structure construction, narrative-driven panel design, kinetic instrumentation, and the material culture and operation of a typical USFS lookout tower. The interactive structure was functional, complete with standard waterless plumbing (Jerry’s five-gallon bucket), fire marshal phone, USGS maps, two iconic lookout tower shutters in the event of inclement weather and other lookout “creature comfort” ephemera.
Loo with a View; Air Shed Projection Mapping on HJA Topo Map
The Loo with a View, a fun (however practical) structural study draws heavily on William Bonner’s Air Shed thesis project with David Buckley Borden, Dr. Fred Swanson, and others at the HJ Andrews Experimental Forest.
Special thanks to Tom Gottelier of Designers on Holiday for sharing their architectural expertise with the team.
The Landscape Makers team members are grateful to Fuller Director, Liska Chan, and Fuller Lab Director Michael Geffel for championing this collaborative project. David Buckley Borden’s Fuller Design Fellowship, the collaborative interdisciplinary work, and resulting exhibition was generously supported by the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes.
About the Fuller Center for Productive Landscapes
The Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes (FIPL) is an internationally recognized center for research-based design and design-as-research, focused on the role of place in cultural sustainability, and grounded in the arts and humanities. Guided by a team of scholars, students use fieldwork and art methods to investigate the ongoing stewardship of landscapes and culture.
The FIPL has four primary goals:
1. Reclaim second nature – the productive landscape – as a central inquiry within the discipline of landscape architecture.
2. Centralize praxis and material experimentation within the landscape curriculum.
3. Connect University of Oregon students to globally significant places, practices, research, and pedagogies.
4. Enhance the arts and humanities as modes of inquiry within the curriculum.
The FIPL holds a series of events over the academic year, in both Oregon and Pennsylvania, connecting students to critical ideas in landscape architecture through art inquiry, fieldwork, collaboration, and learning from experts in the field. The events are structured by an annual theme within the framework of productive landscapes. The FIPL runs three annual signature events: a summer field school that is an immersive, intense experience for a small group of students, initiated by a lecture open to the public, and a preparatory spring seminar open to any University student. The annual events alternate between different physical settings, learning modes, class size, and inquiry media to provide a wide range of opportunities for learning. The FIPL leverages the signature events as the basis of landscape architectural research, forging connections between collaborators, and resulting in the dissemination of arts and humanities-based landscape architecture research through publications, design competitions, and exhibitions.
EPA-B Boats
Ecotoxic Patrol by Autonomous Blast Boat (EPA-B Boat) is a six-step science-communication to direct-action project by David Buckley Borden and collaborators that is designed to empower local citizens in the environmental stewardship of community waterways. The performance-based work is intended to inform, involve and enable citizens and communities to interact and influence authorities in local environmental protection.
The EPA-B Boat project is organized around six principal actions.
1. Collect water samples from public waterways with small autonomous patrol boats. *
2. Analyze water samples for ecotoxic pollutants.
3. Report all hazardous condition findings with signal flags at high-viz public river-access site. *
4. Put toxic offenders on blast by organizing conspicuous, public EPA-B boat rally and BBQ party on riverfront park.
5. Initiate river remediation effort through direct-action and/or legal remedy. *
6. Repeat for sustained citizen agency of ecological health of waterways. *
* Do not ask for permission; respectfully, yet assertively, proceed with collective well-informed action.
Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jenny Ginn, Isaac Martinotti, and Sabin Winkler.
The design development of EPA-B Boats project has been initially funded by a creative-practice research grant from the OSU Foundation’s Andrews Fund, the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes, and the sale of artwork on this website.
EPA-B Boats concept drawing, 11x11 inch, digital illustration, by David Buckley Borden, winter 2024.
EPA-Boats prototypes, plywood and assorted recycled marine hardware, 2024. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Isaac Martinotti.
Alpha-Chem Warning Flag concept drawing, 11x11 inch, digital illustration, by David Buckley Borden, winter 2024.
Zinc, Alpha-Chem Flag, marine grade canvas, 4 x 4 feet, 2024. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jenny Ginn, and Sabine Winkler
Enviro Barn Quilts
The Enviro Barn Quilts project began as an “unsolicited proposal” by David Buckley Borden to Kevin Shanley, the Board Director at the Friends of Buford Park, in the Spring of 2021. Borden was inspired by a site visit of the farm-turned-public-park and was particularly impressed by the old dairy barn and Shanley’s interest in leveraging the barn as a community-engagement asset to support the non-profit’s stewardship mission.
The initial unsolicited proposal was presented on Borden’s Instagram account as part of his spring 2021 landscape architecture studio at the School of Architecture and Environment, University of Oregon. Borden was publicly demonstrating his creative process to his graduate students; a process that is characterized by his proactive community-appeal for collaboration around environmental education and conservation efforts.
The following summer Borden fabricated a series of large-format barn quilt patterns with support from the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes as part of his Overlook Field School Residency. Local artists Nancy Silvers and Seth Eddy joined Borden to build a series of sixteen barn quilt block patterns. The series was displayed at the Mount Pisgah Arboretum as part of a collective landscape installation event, Recovery, with the Overlook Field School in July of 2021.
Borden and Silvers, with help from William Bonner, reconfigured the series for a pop-up exhibition at the University of Oregon’s Urban Farm in the fall of 2021. The following winter the series was further developed and exhibited at Landscape Makers, an interdisciplinary art and design exhibition at the UO’s LaVerne Krause Gallery as part of Borden’s Design Fellowship with the Fuller Center for Productive Landscapes.
Interested in exhibiting the Enviro Barn Quilt project? Email dborden4@uoregon.edu to start the conversation.
Enviro Barn Quilt collaborators: William Bonner, David Buckley Borden, Seth Eddy, Nancy Silvers, and Ian Escher Vierck.
This work was partially funded by the Fuller Initiative for Productive Landscapes at the University of Oregon as part of Borden’s 2021 artist residency with the Overlook Field School.
Conventional hazardous material signs are reimagined as traditional quilt blocks.
Concept sketch of unsolicited proposal created by Borden to illustrate the large-format barn quilts installed on the west side of the abandoned dairy barn at Buford Park in Eugene, Oregon.
Enviro Barn Quilts on display at Landscape Makers exhibition, LaVerne Krause Gallery, Lawrence Hall, University of Oregon, Winter 2022.
The final series of large-format mixed-media barn quilt designs were inspired by regional Pacific Northwest narratives in response to the 2020 wildfire season, which was noted as one of the most extensive seasons on record. The 44-inch square quilt-block patterns were created from recycled hazardous material signs to communicate community memorial, testament, critique, respect, and celebration of wildfires as an ecological phenomenon. While telling the story of the 2020 fire season, the work addresses larger issues of climate change, human impact, industrial practice, personal experience, community activism, and the future of wildfire response in the PNW forests.
Some quilt designs, such as Monkey Wrench and Burnt Bear Paw (left and right) are reinterpreted traditional folk patterns that continue to resonate with contemporary environmental narratives. Other designs were created anew in response to local community chronicles. These neo-folk pieces, with titles such as Wind Event, Back-40 Block Aid, and Chevron Fossus Mortis, push the folk tradition into new narrative territory as humanity reckons with novel ecological challenges brought on by climate change.
Select Enviro Barn Quilts reconfigured as a stand alone cube for a pop-up community event at the University of Oregon’s Urban Farm in the fall of 2021.
Environmental Wayfinding
Environmental Wayfinding System (EWS). Building off traditional “hobo” pictographs, this reimagined folk communication system serves as a graphic survival-code for people navigating environmental collapse. Some symbols communicate opportunities for potable water, free charging stations, clean campsites, dry firewood, and welcoming “safe” communities. Conversely, other symbols warn of environmental threats and misfortunes including arson wildfires, barren farmland, superfund sites, chemical plumes, monoculture landscapes, and pandemic hotspots.
The Environmental Wayfinding System is a living graphic language that is constantly evolving in response to ecological developments and consequential cultural phenomena. Like many underground communication systems, EWS is most often informally shared amongst its users. EWS is fairly unique in that its adoption transcends class, race, social status and other tribal affiliations and identities. EWS seems to appeal to anyone interested in survival. So, it is not surprising that EWS symbols have been recorded across North America ranging from the hills of the Rust Belt and the desiccated flats of the Dust Bowl 2.0 Region to the swamped back alleys of American coastal city states.
In the semiotic tradition, EWS is a learned communication system. As such, it is not surprising to see EWS signs and symbols incorporated into homemade items as a means to teach this survival knowledge to the young. Documented examples of EWS objects include baby quilts, bandanas, lightning stools, hand tools, and even toys for children. There is a movement to standardize EWS in an effort to make it more accessible across all resiliency-indexed social strata. To that end, a newly published pamphlet entitled The People’s Guide to Ecological Collapse, was released at David Buckley Borden’s Ghost Forests exhibition at Simmons University’s Trustman Art Gallery in the summer of 2022. Remaining copies of the hand-printed pamphlet were distributed through this webpage.
Environmental Wayfinding Baby Quilt, 54 X 54 inches, silkscreened 600 denier canvas, 2020. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Mike Demaggio, and Helen Popinchalk.
Environmental Wayfinding System, No. 1. 18 X 24 inches one-color silkscreen print on 100lb Chipboard Kraft French Paper. Signed and numbered. Edition of 10. Collaboration with Helen Popinchalk. Print is available here for purchase.
Two-color silkscreen-print on 20" square cotton bandana. Limited-edition of 50 per colorway, light blue or white, bandana. Collaboration between Jenny Ginn and David Buckley Borden. Available for purchase here.
Tigard Universal Beacon
The Tigard Universal Beacon, is a public art project created by David Buckley Borden in collaboration with Rios, Art Design Situation, Pike Awning, lighting designer Chris Herring, and the City of Tigard, Oregon. The temporary installation serves as a beacon, announcing to Tigard residents, the arrival of the new Universal Plaza site within the context of community interaction during a global pandemic. The large-scale work is created from common construction scaffolding, lighting elements, and a weave of vibrant fabric. The installation, which runs 112’ along the length of the new plaza’s west side, is punctuated by a 30-feet tower that features an abstract flame that glimmers in a gentle wind and lights to life in the evening.
Understanding the community’s pent-up desire for activity on the site, and remaining sensitive to social-distancing needs, the installation is designed to be experienced from afar and within. With the integration of socially-distanced rain tents, one can even use the artwork as shelter. The bold pop of color is designed to draw people into the piece, which from a distance appears to float on site. Guests are encouraged to walk under and around the installation to fully experience the interplay of light, shadow, and color that the artwork facilitates both day and night. In essence, the public artwork is about experimentation and play in a way that is universally understandable, and accessible to community members of all backgrounds.
The public art installation is located at the Universal Plaza at 9040 SW Burnham Street, Tigard, OR and is scheduled to be on site until Spring 2022. #tigarduniversalplaza
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Acknowledgement: Much gratitude to Peter Emerson and Graham Sandelski of Rios for their creative support, encouragement, and patience for this COVID-era public work.
Tigard Universal Beacon at dusk, Spring 2021. Photography by Alicia J. Rose.
Tigard Universal Beacon at night, Spring 2021. Lighting Design by Chris Herring. Photography by Alicia J. Rose.
Tigard Universal Beacon, tower detail, Winter 2021. Photography by Alicia J. Rose.
WIP photography; installation by Pike Awning on day one of two-day fabric install.
Study drawing with scaffolding installed on site in background.
Field test of fabric performance on scaffolding mock-up.
Early concept drawing of tower component.
Early concept drawing of fabric wrap and colorway.
Early concept drawing of colorway and night time performance.
Landscape Futures
As a 2016-2017 Charles Bullard Fellow in Forest Research at Harvard University, David Buckley Borden worked as an embedded artist/designer-in-residence at Harvard’s research forest in Petersham, MA. Over the course of the year, Borden created a variety of art and design driven science-communication projects with ongoing Harvard Forest research initiatives.
The Fellowship enabled Borden to explore and test the theory and practice of design-driven science communication. Central to his work was research into past and current trends of public engagement with science, specifically ecology and forestry. This research included applied creativity as an exploration of new ideas, communication models, and practice modes. In particular, as Borden developed creative work with scientists, he asked, “How can art and design support science communication to foster cultural cohesion around ecological issues and help inform ecology-minded decision making?”
Borden’s fellowship program included a variety of research-based design projects, including work inspired by New England Landscape Futures Lab at the Harvard Forest. Led by Kathy Lambert and Jonathan Thompson, the lab seeks to understand possible trends and impacts of landscape change in New England by developing and analyzing a set of alternative landscape scenarios to inform decisions on land-use planning, infrastructure investment, conservation priority-setting, and forest management.
Borden’s creative output, informed and inspired by the lab’s research, focused on New England futures, to visualize how the region could change over the next 50 years. Borden’s contribution intended to demystify the process of computer modeling underlying the project and help translate spatial mapping to accessible visualizations. This futures work included conventional perspectives, such as scenario landscape illustrations using the Harvard Forest’s Fisher Museum’s dioramas. Visualizations also helped communicate qualitative research such as stakeholder focus groups, or tease out ecological development details, such as invasive pests like the emerald ash borer, within different cultural perspectives across varying scenarios.
Beyond the conventional 2D graphic techniques, Borden experimented with a variety of media and methods in which to engage the public on the ideas within various New England landscape scenarios. The work explored provocative communication approaches to help stakeholders appreciate relevant scenarios for the future. It ranged from pedagogical props for public presentation to future-thinking speculative design explorations, as both renderings and physical installations on the grounds of the Harvard Forest. Often inspired by the subtext of future scenario lab research, the work was intended to provoke critical thought and discussion amongst scientists, creatives, and the general population.
David Buckley Borden’s landscape futures work was financially supported by a Charles Bullard Fellowship in Forest Research at Harvard University.
“New England Futures Scenario Quadrant,” digital drawing, 7.5 x 11 inches, 2016. Illustrative New England quadrant visualization featuring government and population as two driving scenario forces. Illustration based on photography of Fisher Museum land-use diorama at Harvard Forest. Collaboration with Jonathan Thompson et al.
“Future New England Landscape Scenarios No. 2 of 4; High Population and High Government,” digital drawing, 7.5 x 11 inches, 2016. Illustration based on photography of Fisher Museum land-use diorama at Harvard Forest.
“Future New England Landscape Scenarios No. 4 of 4; Low Population and Low Government,” digital drawing, 7.5 x 11 inches, 2016. Illustration based on photography of Fisher Museum land-use diorama at Harvard Forest.
“Future New England Landscape Scenario No. 22,” digital illustration, 8X10 inches, 2016.
Illustration based on audit of Harvard Forest lab meeting at which researchers shared findings from scenario focus group in Burlington VT.
Sea levels rise by 22 feet. “Climate Change Refugees” flee East Coast. Cape Cod Diaspora inundates Vermont commons and coopts town meetings. Dairy farms lose ground to “Field & Stream” condo development. First covered car wash bridge opens in summer of 2049 in West Arlington, Vermont.
“Landscape Futures Prop Kit,” wood, rope, paper, acrylic, recycled knobs, dials, and miscilaneous hardware, dimensions vary, 2016. Collaboration with Dr. Matthew Duveneck.
Pedagogical props as teaching tool for landscape futures outreach. Kit of familiar forms serve as prompts for understanding scenario computer modeling and implications of future New England landscape scenarios over the next 50 years.
“Climate Change Data Stick,” digital illustration, 8X10 inches, 2017.
Illustration series exploring speculative design as medium to communicate feedback loops between culture and environment within future New England landscape scenarios.
“Timber Drone,” digital illustration, 8X10 inches, 2017.
“Back 40 Eco Monitor,” digital illustration, 8X10 inches, 2017.
“Suburban Backyard Filter System,” digital illustration, 8X10 inches, 2017.
“EAB Pestilence Woodshed,” digital illustration, 8X10 inches, 2016.
“Wild Fire as Ecological Constraint,” digital illustration of physical prop, 8X10 inches, 2016.
Enviro Revolution Flags
The Environmental Revolution Flags project is an ongoing series of hand-crafted 3 x 5’ canvas flags by David Buckley Borden and collaborators. The ever-growing series recasts historic North American flags to highlight environmental issues across the United States. The intention of the work is to urge communities to take a critical stand for collective land stewardship and a shared, healthy, ecological future.
Flag designs address issues of ecological distress, extinction (local and mass), public apathy, cultural resilience, community empowerment, wetland protection, ecology-driven industry, collective action, hope for our environmental future, and more.
If interested in hosting the Environmental Revolution Flags project at your community/exhibition space, please reach out to borden@fas.harvard.edu.
Environmental Revolution Fags have been exhibited at the following:
Peavy Hall, College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 2023
Trustman Art Gallery, Simmons University, Boston, MA, 2022
LaVerne Krause Gallery, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, 2022
Mount Pisgah Arboretum, Eugene, OR, 2021
Elaine L. Jacob Gallery, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, 2019
Sasaki Associates, Watertown, MA. 2019
Somerville Historic Museum, Somerville, MA, 2018
Urbano Project, Jamaica Plain, MA, 2018
Fisher Museum, Harvard Forest, Petersham, MA, 2017
Aviary Gallery, Jamaica Plain, MA, 2016
Daly Projects, Jackson, WY, 2015
Teton ArtLab, Jackson, WY, 2015
Innovation and Design Building, Boston, MA, 2015
Environmental Revolution Flag Collaborators:
David Buckley Borden
Michael Demaggio
Asa DeWitt
CC McGregor
Nancy Silvers
Sabine Winkler
Don’t Give Up Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2018. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Michael Demaggio.
An Appeal to All Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2020. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Michael Demaggio.
Local Extinction Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2019. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Michael Demaggio.
Royal Wetland Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2021. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Michael Demaggio.
Sixth Extinction Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2019. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Michael Demaggio.
Bunk Hill Flag, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2018. Collaborators: David Buckley Borden and Michael Demaggio.
Wetland Command Flag 2.0, marine-grade canvas, 3 x 5 feet, 2020. Collaborators David Buckley Borden, Michael Demaggio, and Ian Escher Vierck
Commemorative Ice Picks
Icebergs, glacial ice, sea ice, sheet ice, pack ice, shelf ice, pancake ice, grease ice, stagnant ice, fast ice, land-fast ice (AKA shore-fast ice), frazil ice, ice floes, nilus ice, ice melts, and the ice-cold stone-sober look of disbelief as the seas rise 66 meters in a world with no ice.
To commemorate significant events, we mark experiences with annual holidays, honored symbols, cultural objects, and supporting narratives, in the hopes that the commemoration makes it easier to remember (and learn from) important historic events. Commemoration elevates ecological events from an otherwise ordinary historical sequence, it also has the power to index environmental values. Chronicling ecological loss through commemorative objects allows us to acknowledge our ecological legacies and critically reflect on our collective and individual environmental impact.
The Commemorative Ice Picks project, code-named “Warm Soda,” honors global ice loss, across physical and temporal scales, ranging from the microscopic ice crystals of Santa’s frozen tears in the North Pole, to the anticipated continental melt down of the 5,400,000 square mile Antarctic ice sheet down South.
Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jake K. Byers, and Isaac Martinotti.
Commemorative Ice Picks, concept sketch based on vintage ice picks, Winter 2024.
Agency Residency
David Buckley Borden began his “Special Agent Artist Residency” at Agency Landscape and Planning in January of 2020. What started as an opportunity to fabricate a public engagement model for the Cambridge-MA based firm organically developed into an unprecedented artist-in-residency for both Borden and Agency. Similar to Borden’s previous residencies, the collaborative opportunity was framed as an open-ended program in which the artist would work with an allied community interested in the visual communication of landscape, culture, and ecology. Borden’s intention was to collaborate with in-house designers, planners, and landscape architects within the context of Agency’s professional practice. Unlike Borden’s previous residencies, the opportunity started in step with a global pandemic.
Although Borden’s collaborative aim was to contribute to Agency’s practice in the form of proposals, drawings, models/sculptures, and potential community-driven art installations, COVID19 would present unanticipated constraints. Despite a pivot to a “remote residency” format, both Borden and Agency would benefit from the exchange of creative energy and ideas. Generous mindsets, flexible attitudes, and a host of digital design applications enabled the collaborative experiment to continue. The online output included a series of renderings including landscape perspectives, plans, diagrams, bird’s eye views, and other digital drawings. Some drawings were conventional. While others played with visual communication standards within the field of landscape architecture, albeit through Borden’s unique creative lens.
In terms of career development, the Special Agent Residency was a chance for Borden to re-acclimate himself with the landscape architecture profession in preparation for a two-year appointment as a visiting professor at University of Oregon’s College of Design. Although initially trained as a landscape architect, Borden was grateful to test his creative skills and perspective within the kindred practice of Agency. Specifically, the residency was an opportunity for Borden to apply interdisciplinary expertise he developed at the Harvard Forest. Borden re-tooled his approach to developing environmental science-communication projects with Harvard researchers back to the landscape architecture profession. The success of the residency was certainly built off shared values and a mutual respect. Still, the success was arguably amplified by Agency’s openness to an offbeat creative voice within its rigorous mission-driven practice.
As part of his critical practice, Borden has begun to examine his Special Agent Residency experience as a case-study for embedding visual artists within landscape architecture and planning firms as a forward-thinking mode of interdisciplinary design practice. Borden’s online writings and social media posts are the first steps in his reflection of working with Agency and their shared experience of making environmental place-based issues accessible by means of an art-driven visual narrative.
Site Mapping
Site map with major beloved features and assets, both cultural and environmental. The creative direction for this series of proposal drawings embraces the site’s land-use and local history; natural, cultural, and shared.
Practice Diagram
Local geologic stratum serves as the visual framework to communicate team’s empathetic approach to the master planning and the implementation process.
Annotated Drawing, Redux
Artifacts found on site are recast as potential site futures with the addition of simple annotation. Traditional annotated drawings, a staple of landscape architecture and planning practices, are playfully upended to communicate design intentions, including inspiring visions for the future based on local land-use history.
Organizational Chart, Revived
This John Audubon inspired representation poetically presents the team organizational chart as an ecosystem diagram. Local flora and fauna graphics speak to the team’s dedication to landscape stewardship and its environmentally-sensitive ethos. The non-hierarchical organization is a nod to the fact that the collaborative structure is dynamic, responsive, and inter-dependent. However, the team’s function is firmly centered on needs of local communities.
Conceptual Sustainability Diagram
This inspired reinterpretation of a wind rose diagram casts the landscape’s land-use practices in terms of sustainability from the past into the near future. The diagrams communicate an understanding of sustainable practices in a simple four quadrant wind rose format. Iconic Hudson River images serve as the graphic texture to the diagrams and nod to the site’s rich history.
Diagram as Visual Metaphor
Historic photographs of on-site brick making are presented as a visual metaphor that liken brick-making to the team’s planning process, which is driven by a generative feedback loop between culture and ecology.
Generative Power of Collaboration
As with many creative collaborations, the exchange of novel ideas, applications, and critiques influences all active participants. Creative influence tends to flow both ways when it comes to generative feedback loops. This tendency is often strengthened within the context of an interdisciplinary team. There are clear examples of Borden’s direct influence on Agency project work. The effect of Agency, as a design culture and group of individual designers, also influenced Borden. For example, Borden’s diagrams on collaboration and experimentation, developed for an independent publication on interdisciplinary science-communication clearly builds off graphic tropes he was exposed to while in residence at Agency Landscape and Planning.
Creative Leverage
The Agency AIR presented Borden with opportunities to leverage pre-existing work from his back catalogue of landscape-related artwork. For example, to round out a creative direction for an RFP, Borden combined select “Environmental Flag” graphics with site photographs to produce a series of stylized page dividers for the final submission over the course of an afternoon. These drawings are a simple case of leveraging an artist’s creative capital to add value to a new collaborative effort. It represents a practical win-win opportunity for both visual artist and the landscape architecture and planning studio.
Novel Ecosystem Generator
Novel Ecosystem Generator, public art Installation at Gregg Museum of Art and Design, NC State, Raleigh, NC, October 2019 to March 2020. Collaboration between David Buckley Borden and Dr. Aaron M Ellison for Art’s Work in the Age of Biotechnology: Shaping Our Genetic Futures exhibition, curated by Hannah Star Rogers.
The Novel Ecosystem Generator is a kinetic public art installation designed to represent a process engine that takes in existing genes, organisms, or entire ecosystems, restructures and rearranges them, and outputs new biological systems. The sculpture physically enacts the idea that new ecosystems are generated by inputs through a machine: it points out that whether or not we intend to create new ecosystems, there are a set of processes that shape them. The before and after conditions represented in the artwork challenge viewers to consider profound examples of this Anthropocene phenomenon.
People are constantly disassembling, rearranging, and restructuring genes, organisms, ecosystems, and the environment. This process of creating novel ecosystems occurs both deliberately and unintentionally, creating consequences that range from the predictable to the unimaginable. Deliberate cross-breeding, production of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), introduction of “gene-drives” for mosquito control, or gene splicing using CRISPR all result in the introduction of new kinds of plants and animals. These intentional introductions engender new interactions in ecosystems that may have been in place for millennia.
Similarly, people transport species from state to state and between countries, leading to the arrival and spread of introduced species in new places. These movements of species and their interaction with native organisms, coupled with ongoing, human-caused changes to the land, sea, and climate, together lead to unexpected and unintended consequences. Such “unintentional genetic engineering” is happening continuously and, like its intentional counterpart, has great potential to generate new and unexpected ecological relationships.
Borden and Ellison’s sculpture prompts us to think about our individual and collective responsibility for the environmental changes we have created—and continue to create.
About the Exhibition
Art’s Work in the Age of Biotechnology: Shaping Our Genetic Futures is an art-science exhibit and symposium of artists, scientists, and humanities scholars, led by the the NC State University Libraries and the Genetic Engineering and Society Center, held at the Gregg Museum of Art & Design, the physical and digital display spaces of the NCSU Libraries and the North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA). These activities will elicit discussion about genetics in society through the lens of contemporary art and offer viewers new ways to think about their role in the genetic revolution.
By combining science and art and design, the artists, and artworks chosen for display, will contextualize genetic engineering by bringing it out of the lab and into public places; challenging viewer’s understandings about the human condition, the material of our bodies, and the consequences of biotechnology. The exhibit(s), integrated curriculum, and cross-campus dialogues will raise awareness and discussion about biotechnologies and their consequences in our society, while drawing in art practices for reaching new communities.
Learn more about the exhibition here.
Novel Ecosystem Generator made in part from recycled research field equipment at the Harvard Forest. Array of centrifugal fans spin with breeze.
Safety feature turned op art detail on backside of Novel Ecosystem Generator.
Novel Ecosystem Generator, concept model, wood, rubber bands, acrylic paint, 2 x 7 x 21 inches, 2019.
Suite New England
I always sign up for fun. It made me happy to create this new Hotel Studio Allston installation. The Suite New England installation celebrates Boston landscapes ranging the Boston Harbor Islands to the Emerald Necklace with a spirited interior featuring prints, wallpaper supergraphics, and two dozen speculative-design sculptures ranging from "landy joy sticks" to "climate-change marshalling wands."
Hotel Studio Allston is located at 1234 Soldiers’ Field Road, Boston, MA. If interested in spending a night in Land New England, ask for the DBB Suite (RM 401).
It was an absolute pleasure to collaborate with Liz, Emily, and Madeline of Isenberg Projects on this hotel installation.
Hibernaculum
Throughout 2014 I participated in Trifecta Editions’ Hibernaculum Artist Residency. This project continued my ongoing exploration of alternative approaches to communicating past, present and future North American landscape issues. Driven by my passion for the Great Outdoors experience, the ultimate goal of the project was to promote a shared environmental awareness and heightened cultural value of ecology through the creation of accessible art and design.
As the 2014 Hibernaculum artist-in-residence I created several temporary site-specific landscape installations on Trifecta Editions’ 30-acre site outside of Ticonderoga, NY. These installations and the research behind their design and construction were the basis for a collaborative silkscreen print series with Trifecta Editions.
This year-long project concluded with an multidisciplinary exhibition featuring a variety of work including the print series, multi-media drawings and select landscape installations adapted to the gallery environment. In support of the educational intent, the Hibernaculum exhibition was designed to be an immersive installation celebrating collaborative art & design inspired by nature and a deeper understanding of ecology.
The Hibernaculum project was both an immersive installation and event series, as the exhibition was supported by a month of programming featuring established and emerging voices from Boston's art and design community including the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Boston Society of Architects, AntiDesign, Loyal Supply Co., Boston Society of Landscape Architects, A Street Frames, Trifecta Editions and others.
The Hibernaculum exhibition took place at the Innovation & Design Building (1 Design Center Place, Suite 142), Boston, Massachusetts.
PROJECT UPDATE: Due to the overwhelmingly positive response from gallery visitors, the greater Boston creative community, local press and Innovation and Design Building tenants alike, the Innovation and Design Building extended the Hibernaculum exhibition through the end of July 2015.
About Trifecta Editions
Trifecta Editions is a growing print collective based in Boston. They work with artists from all disciplines to create limited edition screen prints and art objects. Their unique editions are all hand printed and made with a strong focus on quality and craftsmanship. They take pride in a business model that benefits, supports and promotes emerging artists and fosters a new generation of art collectors.
About Trifecta Editions Hibernaculum Residency
Trifecta Editions Hibernaculum Residency is a free-form artist retreat at Eagle Lake in Ticonderoga, NY. Each year, Trifecta selects one artist to unplug, unwind and create a project and print series based on their time in the Hibernaculum. With 30 acres of forested land bordering on the Pharaoh Wilderness and frontage on Eagle Lake, the Hibernaculum Residency provides the perfect setting for artists to disconnect and get inspired. The residency program provides emerging artists with opportunities often reserved for more established artists. Each participant receives room, board and a small stipend.
Hibernaculum Installation
The culmination of the Hibernaculum Residency was an immersive exhibition at the Innovation and Design Building in Boston's Seaport District. The multidisciplinary installation featured a variety of work ranging in scale and media. Much of this work included collaborative design and production with a cast of collaborators ranging from painters to lettering artists to wood workers. View select Gallery installation work here.
Habitat Blanket Proposal
The foundation of the Hibernaculum is a series of one-page landscape installation proposals. Proposals are intended to meet at the intersection of popular culture and pressing ecology. Accessibility to the general public is central to each proposal as a means to promote greater landscape appreciation and environmental awareness. Select proposals were constructed on site at Eagle Lake and/or in the Innovation and Design Building gallery. View select one-page proposals here.
Woodland Sign: Firewood Quarantine
A series of light-touch landscape installations were made in and around the property of the Trifecta Editions residency. For example, hand painted sign (pictured) with lettering artist John Cronan. Other installations include, Hibernaculum Woodpile Target, Wetland Forest Flag, Geologic Site Marker and more. View select on-site installations here.
Winter Nurse Log Silkscreen Print
The Hibernaculum project features a collaborative silkscreen print series with Trifecta Editions. The print series, inspired by time spent on Eagle Lake, center on the ecology and natural history of the Adirondack Mountains. View select prints here.
Camp Bug Out Pack
The Borden Boys (Christian Delano Borden and David Buckley Borden) explore a tongue-in-cheek survival scenario of environmental collapse through the lens of “prepper culture” with a series of bricolage sculptures. In step with the prepper ethos, the creative attitude is equal parts scarcity and resiliency. The handmade works are created from recycled wood, metal, plastics, and other common materials and household items. The functioning objects could help one survive in the event of ecological catastrophe and subsequent societal collapse. The artwork is intended to challenge folks to consider their own individual potential in a degraded landscape with a radically reduced carrying capacity for humans. Ultimately, the artwork is a call for proactive mass mobilization in the throes of our escalating earth crisis.
The 2019 Borden brothers’ long-distance collaboration between Portland, ME and Cambridge, MA included text messages, emails, phone conversations, and two in-person production sessions. Otherwise, sculptures and materials were exchanged via the ol’ fashioned United States Postal Service.
The Borden Boys’ Camp Bug Out Pack debuted at the Distillery Gallery in South Boston as part of the Dear So and So penpal art exhibition curated by Helen Popinchalk and Mary Lewey in December, 2019.
The Camp Bug Out Pack includes: Camp Stove For One, Crap Creek Paddle, Downeast Home Hatchet, Fish Jam, David’s Bowie Knife, Signal Mits and Patches, and Our Dear Slingshot.
Learn more about The Borden Boys here.
Camp Bug Out Pack, bricolage sculptures, wood, antler shed, paracord, acrylic paint, vinyl, canvas, wood glue, assorted hardware, leather mitts, and upcycled junk, dimensions vary, 2019. The Borden Boys.
Crap Creek Paddle, upcycled wood paddle, broken BB gun, canvas, rawhide, and assorted hardware, 2019. The Borden Boys.
Our Dear Slingshot, antler shed, paracord, rawhide, and rubber tubing, 2019. The Borden Boys.
Downeast Home Hatchet, reclaimed 10” Dewalt chop saw blade, copper rivets, hickory handle, paracord, and vinyl, 2019. The Borden Boys.
Downeast Home Hatchet (detail), reclaimed 10” Dewalt chop saw blade, copper rivets, hickory handle, paracord, and vinyl, 2019. The Borden Boys.
David’s Bowie Knife, reclaimed knife blade, antler shed, copper rivets, and paracord, 2019. The Borden Boys.
Fishing Jam, reclaimed ribbon spool, wood, fishing line, Jasmine’s childhood bobber, paracord, glue, and Guinness can tab, 2019. The Borden Boys.
Signal Mitts and Swappable Symbols. leather mittens, canvas, paracord, glue, and thread, dimensions vary, 2019. The Borden Boys.
CDB Camp Bug Out Stove, upcycled cans, Maine license plate, and assorted hardware, 2019. The Borden Boys.
Hoosic Expedition
I was awarded a MASS MoCA artist residency in April 2016. I used the opportunity to test a creative approach to art-based community engagement. As part of the residency, I interviewed a diverse group of stakeholders including local residents, community groups, scientists, and other creative minds engaged with the Hoosic River. I then created drawings to communicate the ongoing local narrative of the Hoosic River’s urban ecology. The series of digital prints were made by combining photography of iconic Hoosic River views with suggestions for art installations. These proposed installations are community memorial, testament, critique, and celebration of the Hoosic River. The site-responsive works address issues of river ecology, access, recreation, water quality, infrastructure, as well as cultural history, practice, and future.
Conceptualized as the Hoosic Expedition, in aggregate the installation proposals form a speculative art trail along the channelized sections of the river. The goal of this two-week project was not to build an art walk, but to use the process of imagining art installations as an engaging form of public outreach. The stakeholder-driven conceptual designs are intended to highlight diverse cultural and ecological issues at play in North Adams and ultimately promote a constructive public dialogue about the community stewardship of the river.
Special thanks to folks from the Hoosic River Revival, Williams College, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, MASS MoCA, and Sasaki Associates for sharing their insight, research, and passion.
Project Update (Spring 2017): As a result of the Hoosic River Expedition project, I partnered with the Hoosic River Revival (HRR), a local non-profit group with a vision of re-establishing the Hoosic River as the heart of North Adams’ community. In support of the HRR mission we created a series of large-format flags to be used as temporary installations along the river. The durable canvas flags were designed as a tactical communication tool that could scale according to HRR’s needs. The project was funded by a Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation’s Berkshire Environmental Endowment Grant.
Project Update (Fall 2019): I used a follow-up MASS MoCA residency to develop the static proposals into a 5 minute animation with sound artist Casey N Keenan. Learn more about the follow-up project here.
Sasaki Pollinator Residency
For three months, Sasaki Gallery’s summer artist-in-residence David Buckley Borden collaborated with an interdisciplinary team of Sasaki designers to explore how architectural tropes can highlight the role pollinators play in urban ecology. This exploration produced a set of pollinator residencies with a playful nod to common building typologies. During weekly charrettes, the team designed and built a residential tower, a saw-toothed factory, a roadside motel, a luxury studio condo development, and a designer cabin on flood-proof stilts. These small structures are nestled within the garden or sit atop custom pedestals. The pedestal designs are inspired by abstract soil profiles and CAD hatch marks. The team worked with a variety of recycled materials and fabrication techniques, ranging from the CNC machine to old fashioned paint brushes.
The work is on view until Fall 2020 at the Sasaki pollinator garden.
Read an interview with David Buckley Borden and Sasaki’s Sustainability Director, Tamar Warburg here.
Project Team:
Nicholas Barrera
David Buckley Borden
Aubrey Fan
Kelly Farrell
Marlee Gleiberman
Jay Northoff
Felipe Palacio
Lucca Townsend
About Sasaki
Sasaki is an interdisciplinary design firm practicing Architecture, Interior Design, Planning and Urban Design, Space Planning, Landscape Architecture, Ecology, Civil Engineering, and Place Branding. The firm is headquartered in Watertown, Massachusetts, but practices at an international scale, with a second office in Shanghai, and clients and projects around the globe. Sasaki is known for a uniquely collaborative design process that yields integrated, contextual designs
About the Sasaki Gallery
Sasaki has been hosting exhibitions in our space for over 30 years. We’ve hosted over one hundred both established and emerging artists. We’ve had solo exhibitions, group shows, collaborations, we’ve shown photography, paintings, sculpture, ceramics, mixed-media, and light installations—the whole gamut.
We believe that we are offering a unique opportunity for the artists who show work in this space, where the artwork takes center stage in the daily lives of our 300+ creative employees, clients, and visitors. And the Gallery Committee often returns to this question of what is this meant to do for us -- Are we looking for work related to Sasaki’s mission? Are we a corporate gallery space? Or do we want to be a provocative idea space?
We have always agreed that our best shows are those that present work that engages, possibly even challenges, the viewers – us. As stated in our design manifesto, we want the Bold, the Ambitious, the Provocative, the Challenging. We want something that brings us joy.
If interested in learning more about Sasaki Gallery opportunities, please reach out to Lucca Townsend at ltownsend@sasaki.com.
Sasaki on-site installation crew taking a break for the flash bulbs.
Forman Watercolor Diagrams
Forman Watercolor Diagrams
Series of thirty-six 8"x10" study drawings in watercolor and ink created for landscape ecology education in preparation for my 2014 Trifecta Editions' Artist Residency at Eagle Lake, NY. This mixed media series reinterprets diagrams from Richard TT Forman's Harvard Graduate School of Design class lectures, field trips and publication: Land Mosaics, The ecology of landscapes and regions, Cambridge University Press, New York, 2006. All text, unless noted otherwise, by Richard TT Forman.
Interested in learning more about Richard Forman's seminal landscape ecology work? I highly recommend these publications:
Landscape Ecology, Urban Ecology: Science of Cities and Urban Regions: Ecology and Planning Beyond the City
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Planning
Fig. 13.3 Spatial patterns produced by three groups of processes. (a) Separate patterns; (b) planned refers to the rea as a whole; (c) unplanned refers to the area as a whole, though some or many places are highly planned and designed. Green area = natural vegetation; white = agriculture; coarse grid = residential; fine grid = commercial.
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Modeling Mosaic Sequences
Fig 12.8. Models of mosaic sequences. Each area starts 100% dark green and is progressively replaced by a white new-land-type (light green is simply used to identify locations of new land type during the 10% to 50% replacement period). White land type surrounds the landscape. Illustration based on original figure prepared by Kristina Hill.
Forman Watercolor Diagram: Landscape Types and Regions
Fig. 9.10 Six types of landscape based on predominant spatial pattern. (Adapted from Forman (1990b).
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Moving Patches
Fig. 4.13. Shapes suggesting past origin, present functioning, and future change.
Forman Watercolor Diagram: Habitat Arrangements and Strategic Points
Fig.9.12. habitat interspersion, adjacencies, and convergency points.
A result of interspersing more than two habitats is to produce convergency points ('junctions' or type of 'convert'). Design (a) has one convergency point, while design (d) has one has two. Such locations are of special importance to certain species. Convergency points are important well beyond wildlife habitat. They are often funnels for flows of water, eroded particulates, and mineral nutrients, as well as for moving animals. Thus, they are ideal locations for predators and hunters. Indeed, for the same reason, they are ideal for wildlife-oberserving blinds and platforms (Forman, 2006). Convergence locations are also ideal for ecological-based landscape interventions such as hibernaculum (Borden, 2014).
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Boundaries and Edges
Fig. 3.13. Eight common boundary surfaces
Forman Watercolor Diagram: Edge as Habitat
Fig 3.12. Wildlife usage and movement relative to boundary curvilinearity. Woodland is pinyon-juniper and grassland is grama-sagebrush. Scattered green dots represent elk (Cervus) and mule deer (Odocoileus), based on track and scat densities. Solid arrows indicate much movement, dashed arrows, intermediate movement, and dotted arrows little movement. P = predator movement (coyote, Canis). Summary patterns based on unpublished data of R. Forman, D. Smith, and S. Collinge from near Taos, New Mexico (USA).
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Key Processes
Fig. 7.4 Flow rates and stream-bottom particle sizes along river mosaic. Numbers 1 to 8 are sections along the river differentiated by a distinct change or boundary. Dotted line = hillslope. Material entering laterally from a tributary or in subsurface flow also passes through patches and boundaries. Flow rates and particle sizes are represented by large, medium, and small arrows and circles.
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Wind
Fig. 2.3. Generalized patterns of wind speed and productivity in a field. Relative to average wind speed over forest, thick arrows in field indicate accelerated , and dashed arrows reduced, wind speed. Un-shaded areas of field indicate low plant productivity.
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Windbreaks and Wind
Fig. 9.1. Flows or movements in an ecosystem cluster and a catena. (a) Flows between a patch and its surroundings in relation to distance and ecosystem or land use type. Amounts of flow indicated by arrows line weights. (b) Flows among five soils in a catena. Adapted from Hole & Campbell (1985) and Woodmansee (1990).
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Downwind
Fig 10.8. Downwind smoke and pollutant deposits related to temperatures above the ground. Adapted from Geiger (1965).
Forman Watercolor Diagrams: Hedgerows as Habitat
Fig. 6.9. Distinctive windbreak patterns around pastures. (a) to (d) Suggestions for the northern Great Plains of North America (Dronen 1988). (e) used successfully in North America in conjunction with Today I Learned (TIL) education movement (Borden 2014). Orientation is determined by wind and snowstorm directions.
Triple Decker Ecology
Curator Pennie Taylor and artist David Buckley Borden received a Community Curator grant for a Somerville Museum exhibition that explored the urban ecology of Somerville. This community art exhibition ran from October 11th through December 9th, 2018.
Triple Decker Ecology exhibition featured selected objects from the Somerville Museum collection, and new works that considered site-specific environmental issues, created by artist David Buckley Borden and collaborators. Project research used the museum's historic collection and knowledge from community stakeholders on topics including brownfields, urban watersheds, highway air quality issues, and invasive species such as the Emerald Ash Borer. Borden created sixteen "proposals" based on the Museum’s collection of historic photographs to communicate environmental issues found throughout Somerville. Additional work, including art installations highlighted local ecological history, current challenges, and potential futures. The artworks aimed to build awareness and spur direct action through programming with scientists, communicators, and community groups.
Project Collaborators: David Buckley Borden, Jackie Barry, Jack K. Byers, Mike Demaggio, Alyson Fletcher, CC McGregor, Kate Sokol, Pennie Taylor, and Weather is Happening.
Friday Night Funnies
Sometimes, after a long week of grinding on the design production line, a little levity is in order.
Mixed media drawings and prints created during David Buckley Borden’s Sasaki years (2010-2014).
She Will Bite Back
Ecosystem in action.
Mixed media: Ink, graphite, colored pencil and carbon transfer on paper, 8.5 x 11”, Winter 2012.
Ecological Engineers: Bison Series
As the keystone species of North America’s Great Plains, Bison bison (buffalo) shaped America’s grassland ecological system for millenniums. Before man re-shaped this vast ecosystem with sprawling networks of housing, agriculture, industry and infrastructure, the American Bison were the crucial player in maintaining this delicately balanced land of grass, fire, and migrating herds. Today, less than 1% of America’s “pre-discovery” prairie grasslands remain and approximately only 4,000 “wild” buffalo remain, down from an estimated 80 million buffalo in the mid-1800’s.
Mixed Media Series: Pencil, ink, carbon transfer on paper, 8" X 10", October 2009 to present, Series of 73 as of May 2015.
Buffalo Head Source: Harper’s Magazine. Publication date and artist unknown.
Mixed media: Pen, pencil, carbon transfer on paper, 8" X 10", Spring 2012
Mixed media: Pen, pencil, carbon transfer on paper, 8" X 10", Spring 2010.
Mixed media: Pen, pencil, digital typography on paper, 8" X 10", Spring 2011
Momma Said Knock You Out
“In Cornwall, Connecticut, and wherever iron was made in the Birkshires, you may still see where burning mounds were: the hardwood is coming back in those hills, except for the chestnut, which reaches about ten feet before it browns and succumbs to the blight of 1904.” (Sloane, 1965)
If you didn’t know better you might believe the chestnut tree is making a comeback. The chestnut blight (caused by infection of Diaporthe parasitica, a fungus imported from Japan on nursery stock) is a cruel organism; just as the chestnut sapling appears to have made its triumphant return and is ready to shoot up to be a mighty tree of yore. It doesn't. The diseased tree remains in a sad arrested state of poor health.
Mixed media: Pen, pencil, carbon transfer on paper, 8" X 10", Spring 2011
Mixed media: Pen, pencil, water color paint, carbon transfer on paper, 8" X 10", Spring 2010
Mixed media: Pen, pencil, carbon transfer on paper, 8" X 10", Spring 2010.
Massachusetts' Premier Ecological Engineer
The Massachuset and Wampanoag tribes called the land I grew up in“Nanamooskeagin,” or “land of many beavers.” Sadly, the only castor canadensis I ‘ve seen in my hometown are found on the Abington town seal at the top of property tax bills.
Silkscreen print on Rives BFK grey paper, 8 X 10", Spring 2013.
Beaver Head Source: Curious Woodcuts of Fanciful and Real Beasts, Gesner, Konrad, ed. New York Dover Publications, Inc. 1973.
Stonewall Field Guide
Ask a New Englander to describe their rural landscape and stonewalls would likely top the list, perhaps second only to trees. Glaciation produced a crop of stones and industrious New Englanders rearranged them into an estimated 250,000 miles of walls. Although it’s been over 200 years since the height of stonewall building peaked in the early 1800’s, an estimated 100,000 miles of stonewalls still stand as an understated testament to a complex land use history.
Not all stonewalls are created equal. The region’s stonewalls are as varied as the people of New England in their build and intention. Stonewalls range from the hastily tossed farm wall to grand “finished” estate walls. Any landscape-loving New Englander worth their salt can “read” a wall to understand a parcel’s land use history.
This field guide presents typical stonewalls in section with a brief description of defining features and how the wall’s form provides clues to a landscape’s history.
Mixed media: pencil, ink, colored pencil on paper
Tossed Wall
The Tossed Wall is architectural evidence of agriculture. As fields were cleared for tilling, these stonewalls were literally tossed into existence, one stone at a time, at the edge of an agricultural field. The form of a tossed wall is loose and often far wider than tall. The builder’s goal was to dump the stone, stacking it up was unnecessary.
Disposal Wall
Similar to the Tossed Wall, the Disposal Wall is also a byproduct of agriculture. In some cases the Disposal Wall was initially a Tossed Wall that had been rebuilt in an effort to tidy up the farm. The Disposal Wall is built from two single stack walls, where the resultant void is filed with smaller fieldstones. This type of disposal wall is evidence of successful agriculture.
Pasture Wall
The Pasture Wall, also known as a farm wall, was built to contain livestock and is the most common type of stonewall in New England. This wall is characterized by large stones and typically lacks the smaller stones of an agriculture related wall. The wood rails that once made up most of the wall’s height and ensured that livestock stayed put, have long since rotted.
Gentleman's Wall
The Gentleman’s Farm Wall or Estate Wall is neither the direct result of agriculture nor husbandry, but is a statement of values and achievement. This wall communicates pride, order, and wealth by means of craftsmanship. The wall’s tight one-over-two construction, consistent batter, and capstone, were of significant expense and beyond the reach of most thrifty New England farmers.
Whiskey Wall
The Whiskey Wall is arguably the most misunderstood and misclassified stonewall typology. There is serious debate as to the exact origin of the name. Some historians claim it is called a Whiskey Wall because it was built under the influence of whiskey. As one can easily imagine, “walling under the influence” lends to poor construction practice and eventually leads to the wall’s failure. Others claim it is called a Whiskey Wall because it was destroyed by drunk hunters, likely trying to flush out an animal from within the wall.