|
|
|||||||||||||
Human beings have been using spices since time immemorial. Approximately 2600 to 2100 BC, the first authentic, fragmentary written records outlined the use of spices and herbs in Egypt. Not only were the thousands of labourers who built the Great Pyramid of Cheops given onions and garlic as medicinal herbs but spices were used in the "pickling" process of mummifying bodies of the wealthy. The quest for spices instigated world exploration and opened up the earliest trade routes. In the days before refrigeration, spices were a particularly valuable commodity being used to preserve meats and other foods, and to mask less appetizing flavours and smells. Whilst in the palaces of Europe, cinnamon, a most expensive spice, was burnt to hide the stench of the crowds outside. Today, pepper, vanilla, cloves, sesame, nutmeg, cinnamon, saffron and caraway are used to enhance and add flavour to many foods from curry dishes to alcoholic beverages. The oils derived from some of these are also used in perfumes, cosmetics, and medicine as well as in cooking oils. Whats the difference between a herb and a spice? The Museum of Economic Botanys display of 21 spices in A Spice for all Seasons display had available a sheet of Quick tips. Quick tip: Mix tahini (from sesame seeds) with lemon juice and crushed garlic for a hot pitta bread dip. Sharing Knowledge15 June 2003 to 2 November 2003
The exhibition celebrates Tauondi Colleges 30th birthday and the close working relationship it has developed with the Botanic Gardens of Adelaide to bring about a greater cultural understanding of Aboriginal people through education and tourism initiatives. The exhibition is on display in the Museum of Economic Botany in the Adelaide Botanic Garden. The exhibition ran from 15 June to 2 November 2003 and was open Mondays - Thursdays, 11:00am to 3:00pm and Sundays, 12noon to 4:00pm. Friends of the Botanic Gardens of Adelaide 25th Birthday Celebrations
Friends, Gifts & Gardens exhibition showcasing the contribution of the Friends over the past 25 years. The exhibition will run from Monday 11 November 2002 to Sunday 8 December 2002 in the Museum of Economic Botany, Adelaide Botanic Garden. Entry to the exhibition is free. Free guided walks in the Adelaide Botanic Garden, including the Friends, Gifts & Gardens exhibition, for the next two weeks on Sundays, Mondays, Tuesdays and Fridays. Meet the Guide outside the Botanic Gardens Restaurant at 10:30am. If you have any enquiries about these events telephone (61 8) 8222 9367, Monday to Friday. Talking About Country: People and PlantsA Celebration of Migration and Local Knowledge by Stephanie Radok3 March 2002 - 30 May 2002.
There are 256 paintings of which 85 are on show. Altogether there is a painting for every country in the world. The plants in the paintings are not the botanic or floral emblems of the countries. Rather each painting contains an image of a plant or a part of a plant that is found in South Australia. The point of this contrariness at this moment in Australian history, a time of intense reflection and discussion about migration, is to make several points:
Stephanie Radok is an artist, poet, writer, art critic and editor. She has been writing regularly about art for The Adelaide Review and Artlink, as well as other journals, since 1988. She occasionally lectures at the University of South Australia, and the Adelaide Central School of Art. The topic of her recent Master of Fine Art in Studio Practice at the University of South Australia was Rapture: responding to Aboriginal Art. She is currently the guest editor of the Place/Landscape issue of Artlink Contemporary Art Magazine. Arcadian Alchemy: Colours for Cloth from the Eucalypt Forest by India Flint15 July 2001 to 10 February 2002.
Examples from the Arcadian Alchemy exhibition. The genus eucalyptus, endemic to Australia, is in many ways truly remarkable. Capable of surviving in a wide range of climates, they have a phoenixlike ability to regenerate following burning in wildfire or rabid chainsaw pruning. Economically, they have a multitude of uses including timber, bee food, floriculture, paper pulp and firewood. What is less well known is that they are also a rich source of colour for textiles through dyes extracted from their leaves. These dyes are substantive on wool and silk, meaning they will bond to these fibres without the use of chemical additives. Some eucalypts can even be used as pre-mordants for other plant dyes. The work in this exhibition is the result of three years research into eucalyptus dyes through the School of Art at the University of South Australia. It has followed two distinct paths through the eucalypt forest, accessing material from the Currency Creek Arboretum as well as random windfalls. This has resulted in the development of two complimentary bodies of work in which the structured order of the arboretum samples is supplemented by the wandering narrative of the wild forest, realised as a series of seven large garment forms. These are constructed in wool felt, with inclusions of woven silk and cotton. The brewing of dyes, the magical luminous imprint of the eucalyptus leaf on the felt, have inscribed stories on the surface. The dresses, using felt as mnemonic metamorphic material, refer to stories of place and displacement, of wandering and wonder, and that past which is another country. They are husks which tell of beings long gone. In their shadows are the forests of legend and history, and the faerie tales on which I was raised. The arboretum samples illustrate the 'eco-print' © developed as a means of efficiently testing eucalypts for potential colour yield. Extract from Arcadian Alchemy: Colours for Cloth from the Eucalypt Forest catalogue by India Flint. Profile of India Flint. Her website. |
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||