Mary Tremonte
Dirt is Beautiful
Artist
Date
2020–2021
Location
Greater Pittsburgh, PA
Collaborating Organization
Grow Pittsburgh
Introduction
As part of Shiftworks’ Environment, Health, and Public Art Initiative, artist Mary Tremonte collaborated with Grow Pittsburgh to create Dirt is Beautiful, a project that advocates for healthy land and healthy communities. Developed through community engagement, research, and collaborative design, Dirt is Beautiful consists of two main elements: SHEd, a Soil Health and Education Cart, and Dirt Tales, a zine publication and broadsheet series.
Dirt is Beautiful raises awareness of soil health, remediation, and contamination in our neighborhoods, including lead and heavy metals contamination. The project is designed to increase the visibility of new and established community garden participants within Grow Pittsburgh’s service network, and provide them with more resources. The gardens of focus during this project include Food City, East Allegheny Commons, the Children’s Museum on the Northside, Whitaker, McKeesport, Duquesne, and Amity in the Mon Valley.
SHEd: A Soil Health Education Cart
SHEd is a garden event resource and soil health information center on wheels. In consultation with Tremonte, the cart was designed and built by master cabinetmaker Gerty Tonjum and decorated by artist Gina Favano. The mobile cart, which can be borrowed from Grow Pittsburgh’s Garden Resource Center, contains all of the elements and activities needed to host a fun and informational community garden event.
SHEd was designed to be modular and mobile. It can be easily disassembled, transported in a car, and set up at any community garden. SHEd includes copies of the Dirt Tales zine; garden banners and other event decorations; outdoor games; and activity kits with hands-on activity supplies and instructions. These elements were developed in collaboration with Grow Pittsburgh staff and community garden participants to provide educational and entertaining activities that build knowledge about soil contaminants and soil health, from lead to nematodes.
Dirt Tales
Dirt Tales is a publication and broadsheet series about soil contamination and healing practices that investigates the soil, land histories, and cultures of various community gardens within Grow Pittsburgh’s network. These histories include that of neighborhoods, industry and contamination, indigenous relationship to the land, geological makeup, and remediation and soil building techniques, as well as general pointers for improving soil health. The content of the zines was generated through a series of community garden events, interviews and consultations with soil health experts, and Tremonte’s independent research.
Copies of Dirt Tales are available through publication distributors such as Justseeds and as part of select zine and art book fairs. To download a PDF of Dirt Tales, please visit the Online Resources section below.
Online Resources
Download the Zine
Download a PDF of Mary Tremonte’s Dirt Tales zine.
Website
Learn more about Mary Tremonte and her other projects on her website.
Learn more about Grow Pittsburgh on their website.
Related
EVENTS
Wilkinsburg Sacred Spaces Arts and Culture Community Day
Meet the artists of the Environment, Health, and Public Art Initiative on September 11th, 2021, at an outdoor event celebrating Wilkinsburg’s history, arts, and culture.
PROJECTS
How Did This Happen?
The project by Aaron Henderson aims to raise awareness of the environmental challenges affecting communities in the Mon Valley.
PROJECTS
Nine Mile Run Viewfinder
A portal for seeing, hearing, and smelling the waterway beneath our feet by Ginger Brooks Takahashi.
About the Artist
Mary Tremonte is an artist, educator, and DJ based in Pittsburgh, with a piece of her heart in Toronto. A member of Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative, she works with “printmaking in the expanded field,” including printstallation, interactive silkscreen printing in public space, and wearable artist multiples such as queer scout badges. Through her work she aims to create temporary utopias and sustainable commons through pedagogy, collaboration, visual pleasure, and serious fun. Formerly the youth programs coordinator at The Andy Warhol Museum, and recently an artist in residence with Literacy Pittsburgh, she values art education as a means of empowerment and social change. As DJ Mary Mack she strives to make safe(r) spaces on dance floors for embodying a body politic with pleasure. Both independently and with Justseeds, Mary has exhibited, presented lectures and workshops, and performed in Pittsburgh, Toronto, throughout the United States, and internationally.
About the Collaborating Organization
Grow Pittsburgh believes that everyone in our city and region should have the opportunity to grow and eat local, healthy, affordable, and culturally appropriate food. They make gardening accessible for home, school, and community gardeners and urban farmers. Their community gardening program works with community leaders, neighbors, and partner organizations throughout Allegheny County, both by helping build new gardens and by supporting existing gardens.
Image credits
Gallery, top:
(1-6) Dirt is Beautiful workshop with SHEd Cart at Etna Garden by artist Mary Tremonte, photo courtesy Kate Zidar; (7) SHEd Cart, part of Dirt is Beautiful by artist Mary Tremonte, photo courtesy artist; (8) Dirt is Beautiful workshop with SHEd Cart at Etna Garden by artist Mary Tremonte, photo courtesy Kate Zidar; (9-10) SHEd Cart, part of Dirt is Beautiful by artist Mary Tremonte, photo courtesy artist; (11-15) Dirt is Beautiful workshop by artist Mary Tremonte, photo courtesy artist; (16, 17) Dirt is Beautiful screenprinting activity at Sacred Spaces Event on September 11, 2021, photo by Shamus Fatzinger, image courtesy Jody Guy
Artist Headshot:
Artist Mary Tremonte, photo by Jesse Purcell, courtesy artist
Related
EVENTS
Wilkinsburg Sacred Spaces Arts and Culture Community Day
Meet the artists of the Environment, Health, and Public Art Initiative on September 11th, 2021, at an outdoor event celebrating Wilkinsburg’s history, arts, and culture.
PROJECTS
How Did This Happen?
The project by Aaron Henderson aims to raise awareness of the environmental challenges affecting communities in the Mon Valley.
PROJECTS
Nine Mile Run Viewfinder
A portal for seeing, hearing, and smelling the waterway beneath our feet by Ginger Brooks Takahashi.