Green Art Blog Additional Posts
Showing 61 - 73 of 73 Articles
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Suburban sprawl
 
What we reflect back to space...Christoph Gielen's photos and Google satellite...
Reverse graffiti
 
Reverse graffiti, clean graffiti, clean tagging, scrubbing inspiration. The industrial revolution has left a soot footprint...some are washing bits of it away...
Art from old books
 
Inspiration for old books...
Upcycled, Recycled, Reuse Eco Christmas Trees
 
Eco Christmas Tree Inspiration...
The Art of Bernard Pras
 
The art of Bernard Pras - Randomly amalgamated common objects.
Re-use and 99 Cent Store Art
 
Choi Jeong-Hwa is a Soeul, South Korea born and based artist who is considered the father of pop art installations. He integrates goods found and purchased from the local community where his work will be exhibited. In so doing he is making a statement as to each areas cultural influences yet is also clearly reminding us of our easy access to globalized goods and their distribution paths. Choi's work is all about consumption, portraying it with a sugar pop coating that momentarily takes away the ugliness of plastic, yet slaps us in the face with our over the top excesses.
Roa
 
Roa is a street artist from Ghent, Belgium. Very prolific, very good.
Zac Freeman
 
Zac Freeman's junk assemblages. Zac has been creating art from collected junk, found objects, and general trash since 1999. A master portraitist ... see the close ups...
Natalie Jeremijenko
 
Natalie Jeremijenko - where to start?
Scarecrows
 
The ubiquitous scarecrow - waiting, watching... In the oldest surviving book in Japan, the Kojiki (712 AD), a scarecrow known as Kuebiko appears as a deity who cannot walk, yet knows everything about the world.
Goldsworthy
 
Andy Goldsworthy, born 1956, living in Scotland. Early works. 1986 and prior...
Junk Assemblage
 
Tom Deininger Born 1970 in Boston, MA. Currently works in Falls River, MA. Junk Assemblages.
Muniz Junk Art
 
Vik Muniz Born 1961, Sao Paulo, Brazil. Currently lives in NY. Mr Muniz uses classical master's works as inspiration for his 'junk' arrangements. He then photographs his work and then destroys the original collage.
 
Showing 61 - 73 of 73 Articles
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Terraced Farms
when it rains, instead of washing away the soil, the soil stays in place. Nutrients are also held in place or carried down to the next level.


terraced farm
Golden Afternoon in Vietnam by Hai Thinh. Vietnam is the second largest exporter of rice, after Thailand. Evidence of rice farming in Vietnam dates to the Neolithic period. www.flickr.com



terraced farm
Terrace rice fields in Yunnan Province, China. Rice paddy cultivation has been in use for thousands of years. (The oldest physical radiocarbon dated paddy is 3500 BC in Korea.) These Yunnan terraced fields were carved by hand by the Hani people, the rice terraces turned barren hillside into lush farmland. These patio fields support enough rice as well as fish cultivation for hundreds of thousands of people. Water is preserved in the hilltop forests, and channeled down to the terraces for irrigation. The terraces are flooded from November to March. Recent studies have shown that methane production can be significantly reduced while also boosting crop yield by draining the paddies to allow the soil to aerate thereby interrupting methane production. Rice production is a major source of atmospheric methane. Image by Jialiang Gao, wikipedia.org.



terraced farm
Hani Rice Paddy Steppes by Hai Thinh www.flickr.com



terraced farm
Raised terraces in the northern Congo suggest past raised bed cultivation. National Geographic image by Micheal Nichols: nationalgeographic.com



terraced farm
Rice Terraces, Yunnan, China. Field was created for promotional purposes. The Hani and Yi ethnic people's terraced fields are one of the most inspiring scenes in southern Yunnan. They resemble ladders, stretching from the foot of the mountains right to the top. www.yunnanadventure.com



terraced farming
Terraced Fields in Yunnan Province, China. Via: www.travelchinaguides.net



terraced farming
Every November, the Hani people in Yuanyang, Yunnan, China begin to waterflood and fertilize their fields, after several months the sediment settles and by March the water becomes clean. www.travelchinaguides.net



terraced fields
Terraced Fields in Yunnan Province, China. Via: www.travelchinaguides.net



terraced rice field
Terraced Fields in March, Yunnan Province, China. In March the terraces appear as glittering ponds. Farmers transplant rice seedlings from April to May. June to early September, the terraces are green. Rice fields start to turn yellow with ripeness from early September to late October. Via: www.travelchinaguides.net



terraced farming
Terraced Fields in Yunnan Province, China. Via: www.travelchinaguides.net



terraced farming
The terraced fields of Mu Cang Chai mountainous district in northern Yen Bai Province have been recognised as a national heritage site. Image by lebich_1972. www.trekearth.com



terraced farming
Terraced Fields in Vietnam. Mu Cang Chai is a district of Yen Bai province, some 300 km north of Ha Noi, in the northeastern region of Vietnam. The area is home to the H'Mong, Giay, Dao, Tay, as well as Giay. Image by Tho Le Duc. sfsblog.co.uk



terraced farming
Terraced fields in Mu Cang Chai, Vietnam. JOinHanoi, Mad Machen Cards, www.flickr.com



terraced rice field
Mu Cang Chai, Vietnam. vietnamhotels.net



terraced farm
Terraced field in Mu Cang Chai, Yen Bai province. www.vietnamtourism.org.vn



terraced fields
Mu Cang Chai, Vietnam. www.nccorp.vn



terraced farming
The rice terraced fields of Mu Cang Chai have been recognized as a national heritage site. news.chaobuoisang.net



rice fields
Harvest by Hai Thinh www.flickr.com



terraced rice field
Terraced Rice Field at Mu Cang Chai ny Nghiem Xuan An. www.flickr.com



terraced farm
Terraced Fields, Vietnam by Son Dang/Hn Dangdong. www.flickr.com



terraced farming
Mu Cang Chai, Vietnam. vietnamhotels.net



terraced farm
Terraced Fields, Vietnam by Son Dang/Hn Dangdong. www.flickr.com



terraced farm
Inca Terraces in Pisac, Peru. The terraces were built to make the most efficient use of shallow soil and to enable irrigation of crops. The Inca used a system of canals and aqueducts to direct water through the levels and increase fertility. Image by Pablo Spika. www.panoramio.com



terraced farming
Terraces, Sacred Inca Valley, Peru. www.lonelyplanet.com



terraced farming
Terraced Farming at Pisac in the Sacred Valley, near Cuzco, Peru. The Inca people managed to turn rugged landscape into farmable land capable of sustaining the large population living in the defended citadels at the top of the hill. This type of terracing can be found throughout the Sacred Valley. By Jonathan Lillie. www.flickr.com



terraced farming
Ancient Inca terraces spiral across the land in Moray in the Inca Valley, near Cusco, Peru. The terraces created thousands of years ago are still in use today. Inca workers paying off a labor tax, or mita, terraced thousands of mountainsides for farming. www.lonelyplanet.com



terraced farming
Terraced Fields of Mu Cang Chai, Vietnam. www.tsttourist.com



terraced farm
Terraced Rice Field by Joseph Nguyen. www.flickr.com



terraced rice
Flooded rice terraces in Vietnam by Hai Thinh.  www.flickr.com



terraced rice field
Clouds reflected on Rice Fields by Hai Thinh www.flickr.com



terraced rice field

A farmer of the Hani ethnic group works on terraces in Yuanyang County, Yunnan Province, China. Feb. 10, 2006. (Cancan Chu - AFP/Getty Images) www.globalpost.com




terraced farming
Yuanyang rice terraces, Yunnan - China. Posted by Observer, pixdaus.com



terraced farming
Terraced field in Mu Cang Chai, Yen Bai province. www.vietnamtourism.org.vn



terraced farming
Terraced Fields, Vietnam by Son Dang/Hn Dangdong. www.flickr.com



terraced rice
Morning work on rice terraces in Vietnam by Hai Thinh.  www.flickr.com



 

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Ferdy Sangma
Posts: 3
Comment
Terrace cultivation
Reply #3 on : Wed March 13, 2013, 05:37:45
Terrace cultivation in hilly areas is sustainable and adaptable, Thanks to the progressive farmers for adapting it; though it is bit expensive in the beginning. Terrace cultivation not only conserve the soil but also helps to retain the rain water to certain extend
Anonymous
Posts: 3
Comment
Re: Terraced Farmland
Reply #2 on : Sun October 14, 2012, 16:21:55
from near or far away, good thing are always beautiful. Let's expend thier surface together in peace, and relief.
reuben mork
Posts: 3
Comment
terraces
Reply #1 on : Wed May 30, 2012, 09:01:03
These pictures are stunning, a result of unbelievable effort by millions of persons. I would guess that the difficulty of living left no time to realize the grand beauty of their efforts.
Green Art Blog Additional Posts
Showing 61 - 73 of 73 Articles
< Previous 1234 Next >
Suburban sprawl
 
What we reflect back to space...Christoph Gielen's photos and Google satellite...
Reverse graffiti
 
Reverse graffiti, clean graffiti, clean tagging, scrubbing inspiration. The industrial revolution has left a soot footprint...some are washing bits of it away...
Art from old books
 
Inspiration for old books...
Upcycled, Recycled, Reuse Eco Christmas Trees
 
Eco Christmas Tree Inspiration...
The Art of Bernard Pras
 
The art of Bernard Pras - Randomly amalgamated common objects.
Re-use and 99 Cent Store Art
 
Choi Jeong-Hwa is a Soeul, South Korea born and based artist who is considered the father of pop art installations. He integrates goods found and purchased from the local community where his work will be exhibited. In so doing he is making a statement as to each areas cultural influences yet is also clearly reminding us of our easy access to globalized goods and their distribution paths. Choi's work is all about consumption, portraying it with a sugar pop coating that momentarily takes away the ugliness of plastic, yet slaps us in the face with our over the top excesses.
Roa
 
Roa is a street artist from Ghent, Belgium. Very prolific, very good.
Zac Freeman
 
Zac Freeman's junk assemblages. Zac has been creating art from collected junk, found objects, and general trash since 1999. A master portraitist ... see the close ups...
Natalie Jeremijenko
 
Natalie Jeremijenko - where to start?
Scarecrows
 
The ubiquitous scarecrow - waiting, watching... In the oldest surviving book in Japan, the Kojiki (712 AD), a scarecrow known as Kuebiko appears as a deity who cannot walk, yet knows everything about the world.
Goldsworthy
 
Andy Goldsworthy, born 1956, living in Scotland. Early works. 1986 and prior...
Junk Assemblage
 
Tom Deininger Born 1970 in Boston, MA. Currently works in Falls River, MA. Junk Assemblages.
Muniz Junk Art
 
Vik Muniz Born 1961, Sao Paulo, Brazil. Currently lives in NY. Mr Muniz uses classical master's works as inspiration for his 'junk' arrangements. He then photographs his work and then destroys the original collage.
 
Showing 61 - 73 of 73 Articles
< Previous 1234 Next >