Oil painting of a coiled green garden hose  on a white background

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Issue 15 

Green

 

 

 

 

Issue 15 — Digital Preview

 

PODCAST

 

Green

Episode 1

 

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INTRODUCTION

 

Mokingpu

Susan Sekaquaptewa

 

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OBJECT LESSON

 

Deceptive Decor
Uncovering Arsenic in Eighteenth- & Nineteenth-Century Wallpapers

Emily Banas

 

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ARTIST ON ART

 

FERTILITY IS NOT GREEN

Laura Lamb Brown-Lavoie

 

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ARTIST ON ART

 

The Times
A Historical Survey of Bitcoin

Kyle Green

 

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Contributors

Emily Banas
Rebecca Bedell
Gina Borromeo
Laura Lamb Brown-Lavoie
Wai Yee Chiong
Paul Crenshaw
Pedro da Costa Felgueiras
Kyle Green
Tayana Fincher
Elizabeth James-Perry
Ananda Martins
Nicole M. Merola
Sean Nesselrode Moncada
Conor Moynihan
Ingrid Neuman
Taylor Rose Payer
Simon Rettig
Timmons Roberts
Susan Sekaquaptewa
Kajette Solomon

 

Issue 15—Green

 

New life is always shown to us through mokingpu, the color green—the light green stems of rabbitbrush, one of the few colors seen in the winter; the tender green shoots of new corn that emerge in the spring against the backdrop of the dry brown earth. Green offers hope. Green represents life.

—Susan Sekaquaptewa

 

A welcome splash of color after a long winter, the RISD Museum’s fifteenth issue of Manual is awash in shades of green, celebrating the color's myriad associations with nature and growth, environmentalism and sustainable practices, newness and hope (as well as poison and currency) and delving into the histories of specific pigments and processes. Manual 15 opens with an introductory essay by Hopi grower Susan Sekaquaptewa, who details the soft hues of the flora of Northern Arizona. “You appreciate plants more when you develop a relationship with them,” she explains.

 
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From the Files

Gina Borromeo and Ingrid Neuman examine the rich patina on the surface of an ancient Etruscan bronze stamnos.

 

Artists on Art

Laura Lamb Brown-Lavoie, a farmer and poet, digs in with Fertility Is Not Green.

Kyle Green offers an exchange with bitcoin in The Times.

Elizabeth James-Perry commemorates an experience in wampum.

 

Double Takes

Tayana Fincher and Simon Rettig discuss green’s presence in a vibrant Persian tomb cover

Paul Crenshaw and Pedro da Costa Felgueiras peer into the green screen backing a late fifteenth-century portrait of a cleric

Rebecca Bedell and Ananda Martins venture deep into Martin Johnson Heade’s lush Brazilian Forest

Nicole M. Merola and Timmons Roberts marvel at “And ice, mast-high, came floating by/ as green as emerald”

 

Portfolio

Loose links and clear couplings from across the RISD Museum’s collection

 

Object Lessons

Wai Yee Chiong spotlights the fading beauties of the Green Towers in Suzuki Harunobu’s Ehon seirō bijin awase

Emily Banas uncovers arsenic in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century wallpapers

Sean Nesselrode Moncada documents Enrique Chagoya’s The Pastoral or Arcadian State: Illegal Alien’s Guide to Greater America

Conor Moynihan offers up notes on Gravity’s Dream by Chitra Ganesh

Taylor Rose Payer recounts Ojibwe survivance in a bandolier bag

 

How To

Kajette Solomon lays out how to tek yuh hand tun fashion as revealed in a scrapbook by Jamaican makers from the late 1800s

 

 

 

RISD Museum Interim Director & Deputy Director,
Exhibitions, Education, & Programs:
Sarah Ganz Blythe
Manual Editor-in-Chief: Sarah Ganz Blythe
Editor: Amy Pickworth
Art Director: Derek Schusterbauer
Graphic Designers: Brendan Campbell, Madeline Woods
Photographer: Erik Gould
Printer: GHP


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Cover image:

Michael Owen

American, b. 1967 (RISD BFA 1990, Painting)

Don't Tread on Me (detail), 2011

Gift of Joseph A. Chazan, MD