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Invasive (work of art)

Artwork Info

Created
2008
Artist
Steed Taylor
Nationality
American
Birth/Death
born 1959-
Dimensions
Various dimensions (various dimensions)

Credit

Museum commission funded by the John Rex Endowment through the Physical Activity and Nutrition Branch of the NC Division of Public Health

Object Number
U/2008.5
Culture
American North Carolina

Key Ideas

  • This work is one of more than 50 “road tattoos” that this artist has created. It is an example of public art, which is art designed for a public space. It is painted on multiple sections of a paved, wooded trail in the NCMA Park.
  • The design is based on floral fabrics from the 1600s. Repetitive patterns like these are often used as inspiration for modern tattoos. This is where the artist gets the name “road tattoos.”
  • This work is designed to be temporary. As people walk and bike over it, the paint will gradually wear away until it is completely gone.
  • Steed Taylor is best known for his site-specific public works, photography, and drawings. He was born and raised in North Carolina.
  • The title of Taylor’s work is a reference to invasive species plants. These are plants that are not native to the area in which they grow. They tend to reproduce and spread quickly and cause harm to the local environment.

Learn More

Steed Taylor is an artist and activist from North Carolina. Community and survival are recurring themes in his work. He is inspired by his own experience of being diagnosed with AIDS. This diagnosis gave Taylor a new perspective on the importance of human relationships. His “road tattoos” are publicly accessible works of art. He paints them on sidewalks, trails, and streets so people can engage with them. 

[Road tattoos] repurpose a common, yet much loved and romanticized public space with additional meaning and significance.

Steed Taylor

Taylor’s road tattoos are created in stages. He first designs the pattern. Then he sketches the pattern on the ground using chalk. He paints words or phrases within the outline and then covers them with latex paint. Taylor often enlists volunteers to help him complete the chalk and paint stages. As weather and foot and bike traffic wear away the paint over time, his artwork slowly disappears.

In creating Invasive, Taylor painted the names of invasive plants that grow in the NCMA Park within the outline. He then painted over the names with black paint, to symbolically contain them. Invasive plants are plants that are not original to an area. They are often brought to new environments by human movement, either on purpose or not. These types of plants have negative effects on their new environment. 

The design for this work is based on floral fabric patterns from the 1600s. These types of fabrics were imported from India to Europe. During that time European countries took advantage of other countries, often importing luxury goods at cheap prices. This action harmed the local economies of less powerful countries, much like invasive species plants harm local plants.

Additional Resources

Resources for Teachers

 

Resources for Students

  • Read an article about the creation of one of Taylor’s road tattoos.
  • Watch a video the artist made as part of his activism work.
  • Visit a website to learn about the differences between native plants and invasive species.

Images

  • A paved trail with a black floral design painted on its surface

    Invasive

    A paved path is painted with a large black floral pattern. The path is surrounded by green grass and tall trees.