Sunday, August 16, 2015

100 Meridian National Monument

Antelope Hills, Oklahoma

Welcome to James' and Yiren's 100 meridian land walk! This is an introduction to a special Oklahoma/Texas border. We are attempting to establish this border as a National Monument and become the start of a great uninterrupted natural path around the world called the Greenbelt Meridian. This border lies along the 100th Meridian West and would appear less than perfect for a "Greenbelt" Meridian, yet it is in reality tailor made for our project. We are dedicated to creating a corridor that has no roads, no fences, no man's and no shoes land. The land is returned to the native land, before the landrun, before the treaties, before the purchases, and before the colonization. It will be kept as a symbol of hope for the Earth, preserved forever, into the future.
Please sign the petition through the following link and be one of the GBM real troopers. Thank you.

Designate the 100th Meridian at the Oklahoma and Texas border as a National Monument and the first section of a global Greenbelt Meridian.
Please sign the petition at:
tinyurl.com/greenbeltmeridian

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Saturday, August 8, 2015

Greenbelt Meridian Project

James and I physically started our Greenbelt Meridian Project campaign nine months ago with nothing except a vision. Thanks everyone who helped along the way and who showed up for the opening reception ( it takes a great effort to walk in such hot weather). We wish we could spent time with everyone at the opening to express our gratitude.  Share with you here is our first GBM introduction to the public.

Greenbelt Meridian (2 minutes and 17 seconds)
wildlifes-need-to-roam

The Greenbelt Meridian light was created by Geoffrey Hicks.

Thursday, August 6, 2015

It Is The Same As It Ever Was


a moth 
In the course of two years while we have been planning this exhibition, many things have happened for better and for the worse in our private lives and in the world. We have learned of so many organizations and individuals  that are making a great effort  to discover new territories in art, science, and global policies. Regrettably though, more animals have continued to be slaughtered for no acceptable reason, more rainforest cut down; more rivers and lands compromised by radiation and runoff chemical, and more humans are born and more killed. Is the notion half for nature and half for human an impossible dream? or unnecessary?

Life is linear, but the land, the earth,  nature, the environment, the universe,are all infinite. An unexpected twist happened when we were preparing for this exhibition: We thought of the stages of death quite a lot. " It is the same as it ever was..." (from All is Well by Henry Scott Holland, 1847-1918)

The opening of the Greenbelt Meridian fell on July 18th, the birthday for Maria Gallagher, my mother-in-law, whose life is being taken away by a terrible dementia. Maria hasn't  been able to enjoy the world around her for more than two years. James and Yiren are dedicating this exhibition to her love of life and  her inspiring will to survive.


Tuesday, August 4, 2015

It begins right here!

The Greenbelt Meridian's initiative is to return a complete circle of land back to nature, free of all human interference, therefore we think it is necessary to mention American Land Art during the 70s, because the ideas of Earthwork, conceptual art, and installation art have been an underlying influences (at least in spirit) for our direction in working large scale, inside and outside the gallery! Earth Art is an art movement and an art form that is created in nature. Large scale structures and sculptures are not placed in landscape, rather land is in various ways the subject and means of creation. In 2012, the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles presented "Ends of the Earth: Land Art to 1974", the first large-scale, historical-thematic exhibition to deal broadly with land art. Many of the earth works have eroded with time and only exists in photos, video, or paper documents. http://moca.org/landart/

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The notion of maximum effort and minimum impact is totally against human progress and value, and that is our conscience toward nature. We appreciate Belgian-born, Mexico-based artist Francis Alys' social practice on earth and share with you one of his early projects here.

Francis Alys, The Loop Tijuana-San Diego 1997
In order to go from Tijuana to San Diego without crossing the Mexico/United States border. I followed a perpendicular route away from the fence and circumnavigated the globe, heading 67* south East, North East and South East again until I reached my departure point. The project remained free and clear of all critical implications beyond the physical displacement of the artist.  --Alys

Monday, August 3, 2015

Greenbelt Meridian Footbook



We put some of the stories and visions that inspired us into coloring pages and this is a companion book to Greenbelt Meridian Coloring Book that has never published.

Greenbelt Meridian Footbook