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HEALING PLANTS, PEOPLE AND HISTORY ART EXHIBITION

Congrats to farmer/multidisciplinary artist Yonnette Fleming and visual artist Lisa Ross for raising another powerful social justice exhibit on the farm this Fall and Winter.

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EXHIBITION OPENING: OCTOBER 16TH 2016, 6PM TO 9PM AT HATTIE CARTHAN HERBAN FARM

FIRST AND THIRD SUNDAYS: MEDICINE MAKING

NOV 6TH, 4PM TO 6PM IS GREEN SEASONINGS

NOV 20TH 6PM TO 9PM EXHIBITION OPEN FOR VIEWING

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SEE PHOTOS FROM OUR OPENING AND

THE WORK WE DO AT OUR THYME FOR HEALING WORKSHOPS

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BACKGROUND: This project was created to educate, raise awareness, and provoke deep thought around the journey of Healing Plants and People on this Planet . Plants are special biological entities to whom peoples survival are inextricably linked. We regard them as sources of nutritive products but often do not think of their spiritual and cultural value as recorders of history, healing and resistance on the planet.


Artist Vision:
Healing Plants, People and History uses multi-dimensional art to tell the stories of 13 plants and their history of healing and resistance in the African diaspora. Beginning with the prehistoric use of plants by our hunter-gatherer ancestors, plants have deeply affected and recorded human journeys on the planet. Urban farmer/plant medicine practitioner Yonnette Fleming invites us to ponder how people around the diaspora have worked with plants for their spiritual and cultural survival. The exhibit will host free multi-sensory hands on medicine making classes once per month and hold open hours first and third Sundays in November and December for the public.

Parallels & Context:
The multi-dimensional art installation is showcased within the Hattie Carthan Herban farm greenhouse, transformed into a vessel space signifying the journey of Plants and People on the planet. Outside the greenhouse, a trickling brook moving from left to right and slightly rippling is projected against the iridescent plastic frame signifying the ongoing movement of People and Plant on the planet. Inside the greenhouse, Thirteen historic storyboards illuminate the live plants being featured. Each of the plants are highlighted in a different historic scenario around the healing and/or resistance of a particular group of people from the African diaspora. The storyboards are multidimensional yonic shaped seeded artworks in themselves. At the heart of the exhibit is a Large wooden ship carrying the major Orishas to the New World. The Orishas are West African demi Gods tasked with watching over humanity. Each Orisha has dominion over a portion of nature. African plant medicine is commonly called orisha medicine and traces its roots some 4000 years ago to Yorubaland in the Ancient city of Ile-Ife. That same practice has been observed in North, South and Central America by the Stolen Africans who were shipped around the diaspora as a token of their cultural past.


Yoruba medicine strives to address the root causes of illnesses rather than European systems of medicine that imitates pathological symptoms. In addition to plants, herbalists from the African diaspora like their Egyptian ancestors before them used songs, symbols, amulets and other religious tools to imbue the plant medicines with healing powers. These items will be strategically placed according to cultural protocol in the exhibit highlighting the historic importance of spirituality in plant healing.


The shelves heavily draped in white cloth is transformed into A Sacred Altar that holds our Story of People, Plant and Planet. The white cloth used on top of the shelves containing medicinal plants celebrates the healing traditions that helped people survive enslavement and oppression and placates the violence humanity has wreaked on nature through the desecration of our environmental diversity and cultural wealth. The white cloth and LED spotlights focus our attention to plants which we may have historically excluded or hardly acknowledged for their redeeming values in our history.

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Principal Multidimensional Artist Yonnette S Fleming

Supporting Visual Artist Lisa Ross

Supporting Graphic Artist Irina Vinnitskaya 

Supporting Filmmaker/Documenter Daniel Goodman

@ 2016 – Arts for Resilience – Urban Bush Educator Websites:
www.urbanbusheducator.com www.bedstuywomensecurity

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Supporters:

Citizens Committee for NYC

North Star Fund - Community Resilience and Alternative Institution Building

Hattie Carthan Community Market

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