
it’s been hot the past few days, and my weekly veggie patch drawing shows it! the swiss chard especially has doubled in size. i know you’re supposed to “thin” the seedlings, but really let’s be honest, that’s a euphemism for killing some of them arbitrarily. so this past week i’ve been transplanting the neat rows of seedlings into something much more freeform in order to accommodate everyone! they’re all perfectly good little plants and i intend to let all of them grow into their full potential… and then eat them! yum.
a life is a life, no matter if it walks or not. and all life consumes other life to stay alive. this is why i’ve been so drawn to drawing plants in these past few years of constant upheaval – they’re so quietly alive and fully present. carefully scrutinizing my little plants in the garden on a daily basis las led me to some contemplative big thinking, not unlike the meditative process i experience when drawing. and looking doesn’t hurt my hands like drawing does!

the other week i ran across a mention of this book while online researching another one and thought it would be interesting to thumb through the next time i was at powell’s. i’ve seen this guy’s work in magazines these past few years and always save the articles for my research file, but i definitely wasn’t going to buy his book in these tough economic times. no way. it’s $60! then i forgot all about it.

then, a few days later i was at powell’s trading in books and this book was right there on the shelf staring at me. sh*t. i knew what i’d be using my powell’s trading card, and my mastercard, for before i even picked it up.
i haven’t read a word in the book yet, only looked at the pictures. over and over. the first half of the book is dedicated to showing mr. blanc’s – aka monsieur vert – amazon jungle photographic research, apparently his background is in science. being french, he’s inserted himself into many of these photos. and always with a typically french over-the-top pose.

thankfully someone else took over photographic duties for the second half of the book, which illustrates his mature vertical planting projects. it’s basically vertically verdant architecture porn, with planting diagrams and everything. pages and pages better than any of the articles i had clipped. so, yeah, now this tome sits in my studio and i flip through it just about every day.