redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: The REDreadTREE & Postmodern Reinvention
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2012/03/redreadtree-postmodern-reinvention.html
Sunday, March 4, 2012. The REDreadTREE and Postmodern Reinvention. CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO ENLARGE. Everything is quotable and open to appropriation. Art about art throws up all kinds of difficulties but here we have The Red Tree. 8211; actually its the. 8211; characterised as, reinvented as, a symbol of "renewal". 8211; "I've been using the red tree for quite a number of years - it is really about renewal and change'. Many Hunniford, Examiner March 2 2012. And the unexplained phenomena of. Hardly seems li...
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: TREEreadRED: Site 2000 After The Olympic Landcare Planting
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2009/04/treereadred-site-2000-after-olympic.html
Wednesday, April 22, 2009. TREEreadRED: Site 2000 After The Olympic Landcare Planting. 1990-2000 Decade of Landcare. Paint a dead tree sited on the highway between Hobart and Launceston. To highlight the issue of tree decline. The image captures the imagination of many people and becomes the inspiration of the. Red tree campaign of 1997. Associated with Olympic Landcare. To mark the end of the "Decade of Landcare. And associated with the "Olympic Landcare. Was moved from its original site where the RED.
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: A MIDLANDS VIEW
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2009/04/midlands-view.html
Friday, April 24, 2009. The LANDliteracy Network is seeking images of Tasmania's Midlands. The Network is exploring the idea of 'cultural landscapes'. And Tasmania's Midlands is example of the ways cultural dynamics have shaped and are continuing to reshape a landscape. Thank you Mal for your images! Click on the image to enlarge. Click here to see more of Mal's Midland's landscapes. The addresses that people need to send their images to are:. THE RED TREE NETWORK. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom).
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: Red tree (and other fires) article_ ART MONTHLY
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2009/05/red-tree-and-other-fires-article-art.html
Tuesday, May 12, 2009. Red tree (and other fires) article ART MONTHLY. CLICK ON AN IMAGE TO ENLARGE. David Hansen, " Better read than dead". No 99, May, 1997. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Welcome to a conversation about a place, placemaking and placemarking. The RED. Would like to hear your stories. Initiated by the Launceston based artist, Ray Norman. Came about as a result of a confluence of ideas. The Landcare. Organisation was seeking a means to draw attention to 'Rural Tree Decline'.
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: Californians Shoot TREEreadRED
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2009/04/californians-shoot-treereadred.html
Thursday, April 23, 2009. Click here to go to source. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Welcome to a conversation about a place, placemaking and placemarking. The RED. Since 1996 has won the attention of many travellers along the Midlands Highway in Tasmania. All have different understandings and different stories to tell. There has been a network of people watching this place and the ways it has changed over time. The RED. Would like to hear your stories. Along the Midlands Highway. Click on the image.
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: THE MIDLANDS: A Cultural Landscape
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2009/04/midlands-cultural-landscape.html
Friday, April 24, 2009. THE MIDLANDS: A Cultural Landscape. Tasmania's Midlands once were famous for the production of fine wool. That too was the case for Woodbury. Farm the site of TREE. Sheep grazing in particular has dramatically changed the Midlands landscape and 200 years of European settlement in Tasmania. Has produced a cultural landscape that barely resembles the landscape managed by Tasmania's Aboriginal people. Came about as a result of a confluence of ideas. The Landcare. The Midlands is with...
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: May 2009
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2009_05_01_archive.html
Sunday, May 31, 2009. The REDreadTREE: Ruth Tomteron Circa 1996. Jill Waldron has provided this image and the context for it. At the time it was taken Jill was the co-owner of the Hazelwood’s Shop – Tunbridge’s general store at the time. Ruth Tomteron called into the shop to enquire about who she should see about getting permission to go onto the land to take some photographs of the tree. She later called in to the shop and gave Jill this image. Tuesday, May 12, 2009. CLICK ON AN IMAGE TO ENLARGE. In add...
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: RED TREE PHOTOcall
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2009/05/red-tree-photocall.html
Thursday, May 7, 2009. Is now looking for the photographs people have taken of the RED. Side at Woodbury on the Midlands Highway between Launceston and Hobart in Tasmania. The Network is aware that many people have taken a great many photographs at different times since May 1996 when one dead tree became an eco. In collecting these photographs it is hoped that new insights into how this site has been imagined may emerge. The addresses that people need to send their images to are:. THE RED TREE NETWORK.
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: March 2012
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2012_03_01_archive.html
Sunday, March 4, 2012. The REDreadTREE and Postmodern Reinvention. CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO ENLARGE. Everything is quotable and open to appropriation. Art about art throws up all kinds of difficulties but here we have The Red Tree. 8211; actually its the. 8211; characterised as, reinvented as, a symbol of "renewal". 8211; "I've been using the red tree for quite a number of years - it is really about renewal and change'. Many Hunniford, Examiner March 2 2012. And the unexplained phenomena of. Hardly seems li...
redtreetasmania.blogspot.com
THE RED TREE: The REDreadTREE: Ruth Tomteron Circa 1996
http://redtreetasmania.blogspot.com/2009/05/redreadtree-ruth-tomteron-circa-1996.html
Sunday, May 31, 2009. The REDreadTREE: Ruth Tomteron Circa 1996. Jill Waldron has provided this image and the context for it. At the time it was taken Jill was the co-owner of the Hazelwood’s Shop – Tunbridge’s general store at the time. Ruth Tomteron called into the shop to enquire about who she should see about getting permission to go onto the land to take some photographs of the tree. She later called in to the shop and gave Jill this image. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Click on the image.