The gigantic Tree of Life, the Baobab

Edina Fulop NBFE UHM Plant Project

Baobab aka dead-rat tree, monkey-bread tree, upside-down tree / Adansonia digitata, Plant ID: uhm. 0042

This particular tree is listed as exceptional tree on the UH plantmap and it is exceptional indeed. 🙂

As the different names suggest, ‘the baobab tree is steeped in a wealth of mystique, legend and superstition’. [1] ‘Baobab is capable of providing shelter, clothing, food, and water for human inhabitants and animals of the African Savannah regions. The cork-like bark or huge stem is fire resistant and is used for making cloth and rope. The leaves are used as condiments and medicines. The Baobab fruit, sometimes called ‘monkey bread’, rich in vitamin C and eaten by African locals.’ [1] [7]

The trunk of this giant, native to Africa, ‘tends to be bottle-shaped and can reach  an impressive diameter of 10-14 m and the tree can reach a height of 25 m, the height of a 5 story building.’ [3] Meaning the examples below may be even huge for this species, still the smallest one is enormous too. 🙂

The captions for the pictures in the album below describe a lot more interesting, visually more easily comprehensible info of the plant and after some scrolling you may read a little about my work method also.


Let me also show you a little fun intro video on the 6000-year-old (no mistake with number of zeros!) largest baobab ever, located in South Africa, which also has some specialty worth discovering! 😉 [5]

As for the way I approached this gigantic tree…

I first made a piece using a structural way of thinking where I could show the scale of the tree and the Art Building behind it. (For UH people this piece of info I found online might be interesting: ‘[this particular] tree was there first, and in fact is the oldest tree on campus. Before the art building, this tree shaded Gilmore Hall, built in 1935 and demolished in 1973.’ Though knowing the time it usually takes a baobab to grow so huge what happened in the past century just seems like an unnecessary detail. 🙂 Also how interesting it is to think about how small we are not just literally, (see featured photo above for scale), but figuratively speaking also comparing us to a wise, old tree like that…  [6]) Back to the paintings… I actually used white wallpaint mixed with sumi ink there, which combined the characteristics of the two by being thick and having the ability to cover, also the shade of grey I was looking for. I went out to do some sketches that day with my 9.5 by 10.7 inch-big little cardboards and I just felt there is no way of showing the power of this plant in its full value by making a composition of the full tree on this small piece. This is why I used two different cut-outs on the two paintings I made. One focusing on the crown and one on the trunk. So this occasion was about working in situ. The second one is more sophisticated, aiming to give an impression of the foliage. I used similar technique on another piece also of another tree in the Downtown of Honolulu, that I had done previously.

As it is becoming clearer to me as the time goes by I am unconsciously looking for the circumstances appearing in the late afternoon hours, so the latter baobab version was also done in the same session before sunset. This also means I worked quickly, which is kind of typical for me, with exceptions of course. Still I would say the dynamic fashion of work describes my method quite precisely even if I work on a bigger piece, for a longer time.

Still I feel I will have to revisit the subject matter. 🙂

I hope you like the rich character of this tree.

 

[1] Hankey, Andrew (February 2004). “Adansonia digitata A L.”. plantzafrica

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pachycaul, Hungarian version of the Wikipedia article with slightly different content

[3] “Baobab (Adansonia digitata) – Information on Baobab – Encyclopedia of Life”. Encyclopedia of Life. Marie Anne Rolufs, Oregon State University, last download March 4, 2016

[4] Photo of a baobab and the Edina Fulop at Foster Botanical Garden in Honolulu taken by author of cserelatogatohawaiion.blogspot.com, researcher and husband Sandor Gobi, last download Feb 17, 2016 from http://cserelatogatohawaiion.blogspot.com/2016/01/foster-botanikus-kert.html

[5] http://adventureswithben.com/landmarks/giant-baobab-tree/, direct link to video uploaded to youtube, last download March 4, 2016

[6] http://www.edohawaii.com/baobab/uh.html, last download March 4, 2016

[7] http://www.powbab.com/pages/baobab-tree, last download March 4, 2016

[8] http://plantpono.org, last download March 4, 2016

[9] http://www.botany.hawaii.edu, last download March 4, 2016

Breaking News: Residency extended!

Edina Fulop NBFE featured news

I am unbelievably happy I can announce my Artist Residency at University of Hawaii at Manoa being extended until the very end of May which turns my stay here into a roughly 8 month-long paradise in a professional sense. 🙂

This means I can use this fabulous opportunity to continue my own research as an artist, use my studio (#204, Art Building), get to know these talented Honolulu-based artists (whose artistic work and activity as professors, lecturers are both deeply inspiring) and widen my pedagogical experiences by having classes over my studio.

It would all not be possible without the help and support of the Art Department, primarily conceptual artist and head of the department Gaye Chan! I would like to thank also the faculty for being so open, cooperative and supportive!

My studio occupancy started on Oct 5 2015 and, according to the latest notification I received, lasts until May 31, 2016.

 

Ongoing Artist Residency from Oct 2015

Edina Fulop NBFE featured news

Last update Jan 28, 2016

I am honored to have been offered a position as artist-in-residence by conceptual artist and head of University of Hawai’i at Manoa – Art Department, Gaye Chan, along with an individual studio (#204) for the rest of the semester starting from Oct 5, 2015. After arriving to Hawaii at the end of August I made some sketches walking around Honolulu and going on some trips around Oahu, but for the majority of my new pieces to be created I definitely needed a space, which I actually got to start using in perfect timing.

Since the University of Hawaii at Manoa is a wonderful campus I felt like the only legit thing to do is to continue focusing on the plants in Honolulu concerning my work (though previously I had been engaged in charcoal portraits). The department has been the most supportive possible introducing me on their official site, reporting my activity on social media.

 

Edina Fülöp – artist in residence – has only been in house for a day and she has already settled right in and got to work!! more info on her at http://www.hawaii.edu/art/news+updates/?p=1253

Posted by University of Hawaii at Manoa – Department of Art and Art History on Sunday, October 4, 2015

 

My work here exceeds studio work in a sense that I have been having studio visits quite often. Beside consulting with BFA and MFA students, looking at their work, listening to their presentations, I have been having them in my studio individually, and whole classes have been coming to my studio while I represented my artwork to them. Sometimes one theme has been in focus like drawing with charcoal in which case I have been making demonstrations for them, also interacting with their drawing sessions by helping them with my advices.

This whole chain of events happened encouraged by Gaye Chan, and thanks to the open-minded attitude of UH Art Dept professors like abstract painter Debra Drexler, artist Wendy Kawabata and printmaker & MFA student / Graduate Assistant Hannah Hilary Day.

I have been having a lot of fun while experiencing how inter-cultural the language of visual art is. I am fortunate enough to have a lot on my plate concerning future interactions with the art scene in Honolulu, which I am going to share in details in due time. About my ongoing project concerning the plant life more info can be found under Plant Project Formulating.

The subject of the time period of my residency was revisited and am super happy about it being extended until at least Feb 10, 2016.