Browse Items (2121 total)

2011_garden_20.jpg
Cucumber growing on the vine.

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Summer harvest of carrots and green onion.

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Borage, an edible flower with a taste similar to cucumber.

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The great pollenators, bee pollenating a thornless black raspberry flower.

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Black beans beginning to grow in the mound.

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Beetroot, the leaves are also edible.

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Beans were planted all over both garden plots.

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Beans planted in mounds. The empty mound would soon be covered in black bean plants.

2016ecoartbagwell20.jpg
Lisa Bagwell's EcoArt Exhibit was well attended by people from towns throughout Middlesex and Somerset counties. It remained on display in Ruthie’s Bagel Dish for over two months, giving hundreds of people the opportunity to view and be impacted by…

20171028_WaterIsLifeReceptionPoliceSign04.jpg
On the day of the opening reception for the Water Is Life exhibit series, some of the visiting and local artists, co-sponsors, organizers and volunteers gathered at the Water Is Life electronic sign, to stand together for the earth. It kicked off the…

2010ecoculturetomatoharvest01.jpg
End of summer tomato harvest ripening on the windowsill.

Tomatoes originated in the Andes, where they grew wild with very small fruits, most likely yellow in color. There are species of tomatoes that still grow wild there today. Tomatoes were…

2010ecoculturebeans01.jpg
The first Raíces beans poking up out of the ground. In the following year we would plant two kinds of red kidney beans, green beans, black beans and white beans.

20171007_WaterIsLifeCleanup28.jpg
Volunteers and program participants sort through garbage collected during the Our Plastic Waters eco-art workshop to separate the materials that would be used as art supplies in the eco-art workshop from those which would be hauled away for the…

2016ecoartshowflyer01.jpg
Flyer for the Eco-Art Exhibit featuring assemblage artist Lisa Bagwell. All sculptures featured in this exhibit are made from 100% post-consumer recycled materials.

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Volunteers creating eco-art sculptures at the Water Is Life "Our Plastic Waters" program.

20171028_WaterIsLifePlasticWaters18.jpg
River Fish made from chicken wire and garbage on display in Blank Space Highland Park during the reception of the Our Plastic Waters exhibit and Water Is Life arts project held in the fall of 2017.

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River Fish made from chicken wire and garbage on display in Blank Space Highland Park during the reception of the Our Plastic Waters exhibit and Water Is Life arts project held in the fall of 2017.

20171007_WaterIsLifeCleanup62.jpg
Volunteer with his River Fish sculpture built from garbage he collected during the Raritan River cleanup held earlier in the day.

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Our Plastic Waters program participants making a fish sculpture out of garbage collected at a pre-workshop river clean up.

20171007_WaterIsLifeCleanup52.jpg
Artist Lisa Bagwell building a form for a River Fish sculpture as volunteer and program participant Christina Proxenos surveys the trash collected during the river clean up portion of the program.

20171007_WaterIsLifeCleanup40.jpg
Artist Lisa Bagwell working with a Rutgers student and program participant to create a fish sculpture from garbage collected during the river clean up portion of the program.

20171007_WaterIsLifeCleanup54.jpg
From trash to art, this River Fish sculpture is stuffed with littered bottles and cans collected from the banks of the Raritan River.

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It is eating time
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