Friday, 12th March 2010

A Glorious Gallery of Rot: Compost as Art

By Chris Baskind in Garden

Backyard compost heap

The purpose of compost is to rot — to decompose and become part of the soil from which it came. Feel free to start humming the Lion King’s Circle of Life. That’s what it’s all about.

A compost pile undergoes a pretty amazing series of transformations on its way to become next season’s topsoil. What happens to the steaming heap of old coffee grounds, discarded vegetable peels, soggy cardboard, and yard clippings is either beautiful or disgusting, depending on your perspective. As always, art is in the eye of the beholder. Even when it’s compost.

Granville Island compost

Vancouver’s Granville Island is famous for its public market. Flickr user sporkist stuck his head into a compost dumpster to photograph this amazing symphony of orange. While not all these items are appropriate for home composting, they’re as beautiful as garbage can be.
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Roses in compost

You can compost pretty much anything — even memories (though watch out for this stuff). The Division of Light and Shadows captures a still life of roses and baby’s breath.
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Read leaves composting

Autumn is the best time to collect carbon-rich “brown” compost. But this bulging compost pile, captured by Flickr user Gavin Anderson, show that brown sometimes comes in crimson.
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Toad in compost

Compost attracts many admirers. This happy toad has settled in on damp heap, probably waiting for dinner to crawl past. Flickr Creative Commons image by John Leach.
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Light and lettuce

Light, lettuce, and last week’s kitchen trash: Compost photography evoking Vermeer by Flickr contributor net_efekt.
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Vermicomposting
Wet, dark, and slimy: If you’re a worm, this is what a day at the beach looks like. Vermiculture is a subset of backyard composting. Worm compost enthusiasts say red worms do the best job, and can process up to their body weight each day. Chika posted this worm bin picture on Flickr.
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Green orange in compost

When is an orange green? When it’s compost. Image by Soon Van (read him at Random Echo).
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Autumnal food waste

Americans waste about 14 percent of the food they purchase. Nationally, food waste and spoilage amounts to losses in excess if $75 billion. In some sectors of agricultural production, waste can be as high as 40 percent. These autumnal fruits and vegetables — photographed being readied for compost by Flickr user swanksalot –  will get another shot at the table next season.
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Mature compost

The finished product! Mature compost, the foundation of a healthy garden. With proper care, another successful crop of vegetables will spring from this earth. And then the cycle starts all over again. Photo by Flickr user normanack.
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Top compost heap image by Flickr user upturnedface / CC BY-SA 2.0. A special thanks to all the photographers and artists who make their work available on Flickr through the Creative Commons.

Originally posted 07. Aug, 2009 | Tags: , , , ,

  • UncleB
    All Free! I compost! Even old papers, cardboard, everything. Spring comes, I take the two year old pile, dig it up, and work it into my veggie garden, fall comes I pressure-can any surplus food, and without even buying commercial fertilizers! I live on Solar Power! I laugh at you, Yankee Doodle at the super market wasting your precious coin on rotting old food, and filling dumpsters behind so you can buy the pretty stuff! The corporatist have you by the purse strings (to be polite!) America has forsaken pressure-canning, drying, pickling, salting, freezing, cold storage, krauting, wining, brewing and such talents, but as Asian demands drive oil prices out of reach, we will get back to the "Old Ways" for survival's sake! Funny how great sun dried tomatoes taste in the middle of winter, especially if they are free! The end of the light sweet crude oil era is upon us American! you will soon change your ways to a much healthier lifestyle, and slower too! Remember the music from those days? Sweet ballads of love and romance,not driving rhythms of corporate America! The transfiguration is upon us! Detroit City the Capitalist dream lies dying! See: http://uprooted.jessicareeder.com/2009/09/detro...
    http://www.marchandmeffre.com/detroit/index.html
    http://exiledonline.com/slums-of-detroit-a-look...
    Don't take my word for it! GM(America) bankrupting and on welfare! GM(China) turned a 30% profit for our Capitalists with our money they stole from us and invested in the Shanghai stock market in "Yuan" gutting our dollar in the process! We must now return to the land, land they own! and start over, from scratch - in America! The “dream” is dead, and we are peasants once again, proletariat, peons, poor uneducated, unemployed and unemployable! Where we stared before we got on the boat! Goddammit!
  • Diane
    I'd love to compost our food waste but we have a problem with bears here. I haven't found a bear proof compost bin yet. So I'll just have to keep composting our garden waste for now.
  • auntyara

    I LOVE MY COMPOST, MY KIDS ARE JEALOUS!
  • I love the shot of the worms. We don't practice Vermiculture, but our compost pile has managed to become its own ecosystem anyway.
  • Great compost photos. I can't wait to get a compost bin!
  • Aren't they fun? We mentioned it in the article, but thanks again to all the photographers who make their work available through the Creative Commons. All of our compost shots we found on Flickr.
  • Absolutely beautiful! :)
  • Very cool shots.........it is amazing how the waste can be used for so much and can be both beautiful and icky as you said!
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