• |
  • Member Center
  • |
  • Make This Your Home Page
  • |
  • Subscribe to the Newspaper
Weather: Overcast, 53° F




Comments  | Recommended

Stars and stripes emerge on field of green

Wielding yard tools, artists carve grass into U.S. flag in Pilot Point

12:15 AM CDT on Saturday, July 4, 2009

By Dawn Cobb / Staff Writer

What started as a seed of an idea among artists has grown into an acre-sized salute to the country.

Tucked in a fallow hayfield off Mustang Road in Pilot Point, a 210-by-117-foot flag — complete with stars and stripes — sits after more than a month of mowing and hours of hard work under the hot sun.

DRC/Gary Payne
DRC/Gary Payne
Lisa Reed, left, Justine Wollaston and Warren Blikken were part of a group of artists and residents who worked to transform part of Wollaston’s hayfield in Pilot Point into the U.S. flag.

The idea germinated with Justine Wollaston, a longtime area artist best known locally for her mural of Eve in downtown Pilot Point. Then the idea grew at the Mecca on Main artists’ consortium in Aubrey to a group of 15 to 20 artists and family members, Wollaston said.

“I thought it would be a great expression of patriotism and the green movement,” said Lisa Reed, who owns Mecca on Main. “We had a ball and it looks great.”

The project, borne of a need to entertain nieces and nephews as well as find an artistic outlook in an economic downturn, began in pieces. Groups gathered to mow, rake hay, survey, create templates for stars, measure, figure out dimensions, weed by hand, bring water to help grass to grow, and then do it all again.

When rising temperatures threatened to topple those behind the project and dry out the flag-in-making, the rain last week arrived — just in time, Wollaston said.

“We mowed the stripes four times and had to weed-eat it three times,” she said. “But until grass grows, you can’t cut it.”

Using grass as a medium was new to Wollaston, who spends a bit of her time sculpting.

“It’s absolutely fascinating to wait for the land,” she said. “You’ve got to wait for it to offer you something.”

Crews trimmed the growing grass to create a bi-level effect with the stripes. They hand-cut and trimmed the stars using a form.

“We wanted to maintain the true proportions of the flag,” Wollaston said.

The hands-on project also was designed to conserve resources. To offset the emissions from the mower and weeder used for the project, the group planted more than 60 trees around Wollaston’s house.

They also chose their time wisely, beginning as early as 6 a.m. and stopping midday until temperatures cooled for late evening gatherings.

It was a unique challenge — one that Wollaston and her fellow artists now say was worth the high sweat equity.

“For a no-budget deal, it’s kind of fun,” said Warren Blikken of Pilot Point, one of several who spent hours in the field. “Happy birthday, America.”

DAWN COBB can be reached at 940-566-6879. Her e-mail address is dcobb@dentonrc.com.

Print Forums

Create A Screen Name

Screen names can only consist of letters and numbers.
Your screen name will appear to everyone.
NOTE: You cannot change, delete,
or edit your screen name once you hit "Save".


Check to see if this screenname existsCancel Screen Name Form

Leave Comment
Conversation guidelines: We welcome your thoughts and information related to this article. When leaving comments please stay on topic and be respectful of others.

You must be logged in to contribute. Log in | Register Now!

You are logged in as screenname | Log Out

You are logged in, but do not have a "screen" name. Create a Screen Name

Showing:




Report item as: (required)
Comment: (optional)
Print Forums

News on Demand RSS
E-Mail newsletters

Advertisement
Most Popular Stories