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NOT ART: “Every
garden a munition plant”
Fritz Haeg is known to many in Los Angeles as the
facilitator and host of the Sundown Salons—five years worth of
collaborative art, design, performance, craft and literary events at his
home in Mount Washington. An architect and designer by trade, he is also
the founder of Gardenlab, an initiative dedicated to exploring the “garden
as a metaphor” and organizing “ecology based art & design projects
including site-specific installations and interventions, exhibits and
events, ecological and environmental college curricula, conferences and
lectures.” In pushing forward a dialogue
focused on changing the way we think about interdependence and community
and combining the discourses of art, architecture, and design, Haeg
questions self-reflexive, hermetic art. When one considers the recent
spate of symposia dedicated to relational aesthetics, or Claire Bishop’s
feature article “The Social Turn: Collaboration and its Discontents” in
the February issue of Artforum, or Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions’
recent project “Civic Matters,” a popular interest in that which is
collaborative, community-based, and activist is evident. Many of these
projects involve creating a kind of exemplary site—a model for
society.
“Edible Estates” is Gardenlab’s current initiative—a
plan to turn nine front lawns around the country into edible landscapes.
On Haeg’s extensive website, a portion devoted to the Edible Estates
project is laden with statistics about the insidious, green and pristine
American-dream-lawn. Lawns cover 40,000 square miles of North America,
claiming more mileage that wheat, corn, or tobacco; homeowners use up to
10 times more chemicals on their lawns than farmers use on their crops;
and most of those chemicals are known carcinogens. Haeg’s website lists a number of precedents and inspirations
for edible estates.
Among those precedents, I found the “Victory Gardens”
most intriguing. In 1942, Americans (and Canadians, Brits and Europeans)
were asked to help produce food to compensate for what was being sent
overseas to troops and the victims of World War II. In the nationwide
campaign for Victory Gardens, pamphlets (printed by various gardening
magazine publishers and seed companies) were widely dispersed in cities
and towns—transforming citizens into small-time farmers and instructing
the novice city gardener in basic fruit and vegetable cultivation. By
1944, there were 20 million of these patriotic gardens, wedged onto front,
side, and back lawns, empty lots, and public parks; Victory Gardens
accounted for as much as 40% of all food consumed.
The first Edible Estate was also planted during a war,
albeit one where notions of patriotism and national sacrifice were not
blossoming in the same way. The garden was installed on the former site of
Stan and Pritti Cox’s front lawn in Salina, Kansas, on July 4, 2005. For
each project, Haeg finds a sponsor; this first garden was commissioned by
the Salina Art Center. For the Salina project, Haeg also had the
opportunity to work with the Land Institute, a research group dedicated to
studying and developing ecologically sensitive agricultural alternatives
to harmful methods of commercial farming commonly used today. In Salina,
Haeg’s edible garden pamphlets continue to be available at local nurseries
and the Cox’s prototype continues to grow. By starting in the middle of
the country and launching the project on a patriotic holiday, Haeg
foregrounded the national scope of the project and its potential to reach
a wide, mainstream audience.
The next Edible Estate is scheduled to
begin planting this spring in Los Angeles, as soon as Haeg can find the
perfect lawn to destroy. Reading his open-call for a family to volunteer
its front lawn for the project, I started imagining the prospective
family, their lives transformed when they realize the joys of
home-harvest. I am fascinated by the pending decision of some family to
heed that call, to be chosen for the project and surrender to the ideals
and mandates of the Edible Estate. The Los Angeles edition will most
likely become the flagship estate, and what seems more prominent here in
the city of LA is this process of turning a private, camouflaged lawn into
a public prototype, and the potential that an “average” family could step
into an interdisciplinary, multi-discourse art-landscape project.
In the aforementioned article, “The Social Turn: Collaboration and
its Discontents,” Claire Bishop takes up the aesthetics and ethics of
collaborative, socially active work. In a number of recent essays and
discussions, Bishop, as a critic, grapples with how to evaluate projects
that fall into the “expanded field of relational practices.” Haeg’s work is tied to the practices of artists Bishop
discusses such as Suzanne Lacy and Temporary Services who aim to create
their own “interdisciplinary network,” with an “interest in the creative
rewards of collaborative activity.”
These types of projects generally do not produce
a product for a museum or gallery; more often they involve a series of
public meetings, the re-purposing of a site, or a confrontation between
communities in conflict. The Edible Estates project does involve an
exhibition, but it consists of documents, videos and presentations on
ecological issues and educational material on creating sustainable food
gardens. The heart of the project is a family’s vegetable garden. The
problem in such cases as Bishop describes is how does one judge a project
by an artist or collaborative that works with a community or group
(outside the art-world) in order to address political, social, economic,
or aesthetic concerns to the art-world?
I wanted to see how the
Edible Estates project fits into this problem, but I found that three
aspects seem to prevent the evaluation of the Estates project alongside
these other relational art practices. First, Haeg does not identify
himself as an artist, though he is often working with and around artists.
Secondly, Haeg is approaching this project with a specific goal in
mind—his aim is not to see where the collaboration leads, or how the
families’ needs are best met—his goal is to invigorate a dialogue around
personal responsibility for a public good. Thirdly, Haeg’s project does
not harbor any ethical questions about the nature of collaboration or the
potential for manipulation of his chosen communities.
In my
conversations with Haeg, we discussed the currency gained or lost by the
fact that he does not identify himself as an artist. Haeg claims to be
some combination of an architect, a landscape designer, and curator. And
although some careful research on his website reveals a painting show in
the late-90s in Philadelphia and a recent “artists, residency” in
Australia, Fritz does not want to be an artist. If one were to look at all
of Fritz’s various projects (the Sundown Salons, “the gardenLAb
experiment” exhibition at the Art Center Wind Tunnel in September of 2004,
or the growing number of residences and art spaces for which he served as
architect and designer) a true dedication to the blurring of lines between
public and private, and an aesthetic enmeshed in making the boundaries
permeable between interior and exterior all become apparent. As host and
curator of the Sundown Salons, Haeg has opened his house to specific
groups of artists, inviting them to take over the grounds for one day, and
share them with the public. Hundreds of attendees have milled around his
elaborate garden, geodesic dome studio, and cave-like basement, listening
to music, watching performances, having their bodies painted. For “the
gardenLAb experiment” exhibition, Fritz and Gardenlab collaborators
invited a wide selection of artists, architects, designers, and
environmentalists to, in effect, bring their work from the outside inside.
So what is Haeg’s role in the Edible Estates; what does he have at
stake? He designs the garden for the house, taking into consideration how
the family lives and eats, and he authors and organizes the website,
books, and exhibitions that chronicle the process. The chosen
collaborator—the family—will make a commitment to keep the garden going as
long as they are in the house. (But one supposes that the agreement is not
legally binding and, if the weeding gets too tiresome, the garden could be
rotated back into lawn without the family fearing legal action.) Haeg
definitely seems invested in this unknown future of each estate: what
happens after he is gone, when the family is left to live out their
commitment. This makes Haeg vulnerable, in that he is dependent on the
family following through, being good to their word, for the longevity or
success of the project. But the project cannot be evaluated on the
goodness of the family or the success of the individual family gardens
because that would enter into murky critical territory.
Instead, it
seems that Haeg’s primary goal is to show people that this is a
responsible way to live and to inspire others, maybe even everyone, to get
rid of their toxic or wasteful lawns. But the more I think about it, I
realize that, truly, the project is not about lawns, wasted water,
combating evil chemicals, or growing vegetables to feed the planet. (In
fact, most gardeners that I have spoken to water and fertilize their lawns
less than their vegetable gardens.) The transformation of front lawn into
Edible Estate is most successful in causing a shift away from the status
quo. Since the British settlers imported lawns to America, they have been
the standard domestic front yard dressing, symbols of status and leisure.
Haeg sees de-lawning as a radical gesture of nonconformity, a new
declaration of independence. He hopes that the project will be evaluated
on its success in spreading this missive—as Haeg puts it, “Hey, people,
there is a better way!” And, in not being an artist, Haeg may be able to
expand his potential audience. As an artist’s project, the Edible Estates
would either be too readily contained within the discourse of contemporary
art, or contradictorily, would be seen as too design-oriented—not art at
all. On the other hand, as an architect’s project, it is too arty. The
Edible Estates project is a hybrid, and it is too contaminated by its
makeup of part architecture, art, ecology, and design to be accepted by
any one of these disciplines. Haeg is dependent on contemporary art
networks for exhibition venues and financial support, partially because he
is already familiar with them, but also because few other venues could
house this kind of project. But ideally, he envisions the project moving
beyond the art world. He hopes to turn Edible Estates into the kind of
news story run on the AP wire that gets picked up across the country—like
Christo and Jean-Claude’s Gates Project in Central Park or the “Body
Worlds” exhibition traveling the States.
In Bishop’s closing, she
proposes that socially engaged political projects must have their own
futility or failure as part of their premise; they must cause discomfort
and cannot actually have a socially responsible mission. She suggests,
“The best collaborative practices of the past ten years address this
contradictory pull between autonomy and social intervention, and reflect
on the antinomy both in the structure of the work and in the condition of
this reception.” It is hard to locate some seed that is orchestrating
failure or constantly indicating the futility of the Edible Estates
project. In other words, what makes this project “not art,” at least on
Bishop’s terms, is that it might actually be optimistic and idealistic and
does not attempt to outline the boundaries of power and influence that
make change impossible and the individual powerless. Instead, it calls
out, sincerely, ---“There is a better way!”
Looking again at
Gardenlab’s mission to use “the garden as metaphor,” one can see that
metaphor made explicit—the cultivation of the garden on private land for
public good is an illustration of an isolated citizen transitioning to
become part of a socially engaged network.
One hopes the Victory
Gardens will not be an exemplary precedent for the future of the Edible
Estates project. In 1946, after the troops returned home, the victory
gardeners no longer felt the need to spring into action and new seeds were
not planted that season; the weeding was neglected. Commercial farmers
back from the war had not yet returned their farms to full capacity. As a
result, there were severe food shortages throughout the Allied territory
that summer.
You can find the guidelines for Edible Estates

Shana
Lutker is an artist living in Los Angeles.
FOOTNOTES
From the
Gardenlab mission http://www.artleak.org/civicmatters/ http://www.fritzhaeg.com/garden/initiatives/edibleestates/statistics.html This type
of patriotic garden also played a role in WWI, when the National War
Garden Commission rallied the patriots urging them to plant “war gardens”
to stave off widespread food shortages in Europe and at home. Wisely, the
interwar years saw a shift in the gardens’ title, perhaps inspired by one
of the 1918 slogans “Will you have a part in Victory?: Every garden a
munition plant.” http://www.earthlypursuits.com/WarGarV/WarGard1.htm Claire
Bishop, “The Social Turn: Collaboration and its Discontents,”
Artforum, February 2006, vol. XLVI, no. 6, pp. 178-183. Quote on
page 179.
Ibid. Claire
Bishop, “The Social Turn: Collaboration and its Discontents,”
Artforum, February 2006, XLVI number 6, pp. 178-183.
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