Words from the Artist ...
“The Cleanup, working with the volunteers and the wonderful team at the
Alice Ferguson Foundation, were beautiful experiences. What I found so
special about working on this sculpture was the incredible intention of
everyone who helped put it together and contributed to making of this
sculpture. It was truly a shared experience, which is the only way
change can really happen… The Water-Molecule Dream Catcher is really
an icon for the world’s Dream of Clean Water!”
– Mara Haseltine
Water-Molecule Dream Catcher:
Mara G. Haseltine, an artist and environmentalist, created the “Water
Molecule Dream Catcher” for the 19th Annual Potomac River Watershed
Cleanup that occurred on March 31st and April 1st, 2007. Inspired by
nature and the natural sciences, "The Water-Molecule Dream Catcher" is
a site-specific sculpture constructed at Alice Ferguson Foundation's
Hard Bargain Farm.
It celebrates the effort of all of the volunteers and the beauty of the
water in a ritualized way in which the volunteers could participate in
the creation of the sculpture.
The sculpture is shaped like a cross section of a water molecule, with
a large central oxygen atom flanked by smaller two hydrogen atoms. The
Potomac River is not an isolated system, but connects to the living
ocean. The shape of this sculpture is an homage to the marvelous
chemical which connects all of life on the planet.
Cleanup volunteers saved pieces of trash that were lightweight and
colorful. Plastics and styrofoam eventually break down into tiny
particles that not only pollute the Potomac River, but our oceans as
well, and eventually make their way into the living bodies of marine
life. As volunteers brought their special items of trash they had
collected directly from the Potomac Rover shoreline during AFF’s annual
Spring Cleanup, the artist attached those pieces to the webbed section
of the dream catcher.
The incredible range and variety of the trash that came out of the
river in just three hours was astounding -- just the tip of the
iceberg
The crafting of the “Water Molecule Dream Catcher” was inspired by the
incredible beauty of the Alice Ferguson Foundation's land and gardens.
Using natural materials from the land, the structure's three hoops-are
woven from Asiatic bittersweet collected at the edge of the woods.
Asiatic bittersweet is an invasive vine from Asia that kills the trees,
so pulling some of it down did the trees a favor! The "dream catcher"
was supported by water-polished trees found along the shoreline. On the
morning of the annual Cleanup, the "feather" was made from early
spring-blossoming forsythia and bridal-wreath spirea gathered in the
AFF's garden that overlooks a beautiful valley near the Potomac River.
The title "Water-Molecule Dream Catcher" originates from the Native
American tradition of "dream catchers" put above infants’ beds to catch
nightmares in the webbed section, while the sweet dreams flow through
the center. The dream we have is for clean, pure water.
It was especially wonderful to create a "dream catcher" on the Alice
Ferguson Foundation's land because of its rich history as natural
historic landmark of several Native American peoples.
To view Mara Haseltine's other science-based sculptures, please
visit:www.calamara.com
Mara would like to give special thanks to everyone at the Alice
Ferguson Foundation for their help, and to Alice Ferguson herself for
her spirit and vision that makes environmental education a
long-standing and positive reality.
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