Tree Planting Project History
In 1985 I began the Bockley Gallery in the warehouse district of Minneapolis,
MN. The purpose of the gallery was to exhibit and support local artists
and help foster an artistic community. After 11 years in the business
I became discontent with my role as a dealer and had a general feeling
of frustration with the current state of the art world; I felt that
I was not "doing" anything.
While discussing my future plans with Walker Art Center curator Richard
Flood, I flippantly replied that if I were to be involved in the art
world I would like to plant trees. With the Walker's Joseph Beuys
Multiples exhibition, a door opened for me. In 7000
Oaks Beuys created a work which he referred to as "social
sculpture" based on the idea that shaping our world is a sculptural
event.
The original tree planting project began as a curatorial
strategy to make real the idea of social sculpture within the context
of my own community. My involvement with social sculpture empowered
me to become an active player in addressing issues that previously
I felt powerless to do anything about. As I have internalized Beuys
message, I have become less interested in illustrating the idea
of social sculpture and more interested in simply doing it.
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On
October 4, 1997 a single cottonwood tree was planted and a basalt
stone marker was placed in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden at
the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN
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The tree planting projects are the visible focus of the social energy:
the true spirit of Beuys is in the creation of the social sculpture.
The subject of the work is its own creation. Working within the community
is the most important part of the project, an opportunity to burrow
into a social structure and to ask for its trust, and then with this
power effect change. To me this is the core of Beuys idea of social
sculpture.
Tree planting project and related events that happened in conjunction
with Joseph
Beuys Multiples, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN curated
by Joan Rothfuss.

Four
white cedars were planted at the Veteran Powwow Grounds, Cass
Lake, MN
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Leech Lake Reservation, Minnesota: 1041 trees were planted
in the Spring of 1997: wild plum, crabapple, red maple, white
cedar. Trees were planted at homes, businesses, schools, powwow
grounds, tribal buildings.
On May 16th there was a community tree planting ceremony at
Cass Lake-Bena elementary school.
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On October 4, 1997 a single cottonwood tree was planted and a
basalt stone was placed in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden at
the Walker Art Center. The Cass Lake Singers, a traditional drum
group from Leech Lake Reservation performed while the tree was
planted
During October 1997, with students from St. Paul Central High
School 20 trees were planted on the campus grounds: ginkgo, Kentucky
coffee tree, catalpa, tamarack, hazelnut, Ohio buckeye, sour pie
cherry, white oak, cottonwood.
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Todd
Pederton family, Cass Lake, MN
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Before
bio-remediation planting at 19th and Central in Northeast Minneapolis
On Earth Day April 22, 1998 working with the Minneapolis Community
Development Agency (MCDA) through their Adopt-A-Lot program I initiated
a bio-remediation project in Northeast Minneapolis that generated both
interest
and controversy.

19th
and Central lot, midsummer
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The Joseph Beuys Multiples exhibition then traveled
to the Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha, Nebraska, where I organized a series
of projects.
| June 26, 1998 a single white swamp oak was planted
and a limestone marker was placed on the grounds of the Joslyn Art
Museum. |

Joslyn
Art Museum, Omaha, NE
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Sanford
Neuharth standing among the amaranth
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In the Summer of 1998 a remedial planting was begun
involving the City on a petroleum contaminated site. Seventeen large
circle gardens were planted with sunflowers, amaranth, and gourds.
In the Fall, the plants were composted and trees were planted in
the garden areas. 31 trees were planted: bur oak, crabapple, sugar
maple, amur maple, Kentucky coffee tree, ginkgo, Ohio buckeye, catalpa,
black cherry; shrubbery: hawthorn, false indigo, hazelnut. In the
Spring we planted 3 yellow poplars. |
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Planting
at the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Cornerstone Memorial in North
Omaha
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October 17, 1998 was the Tree Planting Celebration and Community
Tree Giveaway to commemorate the establishment of Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. Cornerstone Memorial in North Omaha. Three mature sugar
maples were planted. |
| On April 16,1999 I gave a talk on social sculpture for the students
at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. Together we planted a single
white swamp oak and placed a limestone marker in the campus outdoor
sculpture garden. |

University
of Nebraska at Omaha
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May 1, 1999, collaborating with neighborhood activist Janet Bonet of
the Spring Lake Park Habitat Restoration and Preservation Team, we organized
and implemented a community planting event. We planted 33 trees: white
swamp oak, cottonwood, red cedar, larch. Four of the oaks were planted
together, each in the cardinal directions; next to the tree at the eastern
position we placed a stone from Miller Creek Landing, Duluth, MN.

Margaret
Engstrom in her yard on Spring Lake Park
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Janet
Bonet, Todd Bockley, and friend at Spring Lake Park planting
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May 8, 1999, with students from the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts,
we designed and planted tall grass prairie and wild flower garden (Let
it Be Garden) on the grounds of the Bemis. We also planted a bur oak
and Ohio buckeye on the Bemis grounds.
| April 24, 1999 - Earth Day cleanup at Miller Creek Landing, Duluth,
MN in cooperation with Western Lake Superior Sanitary District (WLSSD)
and the Tweed Museum of Art for the museum's Botanica: Contemporary
Art and the World of Plants exhibition, curated by Peter Spooner. |

Earth
Day 99' cleanup at Miller Creek Landing, Duluth, MN
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June 5, 1999 - Community tree planting event at Miller
Creek Landing as a work
of "social sculpture" for the Botanica: Contemporary
Art and the World of Plants exhibition. 27 trees were planted: red
oak, tamarack, catalpa, cottonwood, maple, red cedar.
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October 22nd - 23rd, 1999 a conference entitled Creativity,
Community, and Political Change, part of the College of St.
Benedicts and St. John's University annual Creativity
Conference.
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The
planting at Brian Klinefelter Park in St. Joseph, MN
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| In conjunction with an exhibition and lecture at the
conference, a planting was done in a local park which was named
in honor of St. Joseph policeman Brian Klinefelter killed in the
line of duty. Because this was the tenth anniversary of the abduction
of Jacob Wetterling, also of St. Joseph, the planting served to
commemorate the event and draw attention to the work being done
to fight child abduction through the
Jacob Wetterling Foundation. |

Jerry
and Patty Wetterling place a ribbon of remembrance on a newly
planted oak
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