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How does the sea inspire her unique art?

PRINCETON, N.J. – The artist who invites others to take a closer look at nature recently

Fine Arts and Nature Photographer Tasha O’Neill designs her “Grandmother’s Pin” artwork from dried seaweed, and includes it in her “Gifts from the Sea” exhibition at Millstone River Gallery in Princeton.
— Provided photo

collaborated with poets to present her close-up “Gifts from the Sea” artwork at Millstone River Gallery.

Fine Art and Nature Photographer Tasha O’Neill draws attention to the often-overlooked aspects of our surroundings through the macro lenses of her camera, and now has an exhibit where she collaborates with the Cool Women Poets.

Currently, O’Neill’s exhibition at Princeton’s Millstone River Gallery called
“Gifts from the Sea” features her recent discoveries of dried and very sculptural seaweed offerings during low tide at sea. The poets matched each image on display with their poems.

The exhibition, which opened Mar. 10, will run through May 9. The gallery held their opening reception last Friday. The public listened to the poets read their poems, while they also admired the seaweed art, and purchased signed books, among other activities.

“The opening was very successful. We had many visitors who were both fans of mine and of the poets,” said O’Neill.

“They marveled at the beauty that was inaccessible to most people especially when at low (sea) tide. They loved the colors and composition and the way the pieces were hung together,” she states.

She continued that, “While the poets had their readings, visitors crowded around the provided seating area and even sat on the stairs going up. It was a rousing success. Books and note cards were sold and the food at the reception was appreciated.”

O’Neill spends her summers on the Maine Coast close to Acadia National Park. She “recalls a day in 2012 when the full moon created an historic low tide and revealed never-before-seen seaweed of such beauty that she had to capture it before the tide rose again.”

Always curious about sea creatures in tide pools, O’Neill finds that the Maine Coast has both tide pools and the abundance of seaweed of every color and variety that inspire her current unique artwork.

Last summer, O’Neill discovered the beauty of wet and dried seaweed. She randomly plucked clumps off the beach, as she studied their shapes and designed various artworks from them.

“Her most successful find turned out to look like a dancer now named ‘Balanchine.’” She adorned a bouquet-like form with small cranberries, bright green hop flowers, and the lacy white blossom of wild carrot.

The Cool Women Poets wrote poems that each image inspires. The poems make the images come alive, states Millstone River Gallery’s Curator Sheila Geisler.

For example, there are poems called “Grandmother’s Pin” by Lois Marie Harrod, and “Tide Pool” by Sharon Olsen.

“I am blessed to have known the Cool Women Poets for years, and am thrilled they chose to exhibit with me. My images will come alive through their poetry,” O’Neill notes.

She states that with their collaboration, she always has memorable titles for her images.

O’Neill’s other photography work has been exhibited at Grounds of Sculpture, Bristol Myers-Squibb, Capital Health, and D&R Greenway Land Trust in solo, group and juried shows.

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D&R Greenway adds 50th poem to trail

PRINCETON, N.J. — Akin to nature, the poems on the trail at

Lois Marie Harrod is reading her poem at D&R Greenway Poetry Trail in Princeton.
— Provided photo

D&R Greenway Land Trust evoke love for the earth, and recently they grew to 50 poems.

The trail founders and sustainers, Scott and Hella McVay selected a new poem, “The Spineless”by Dodge Poet and three-time winner of New Jersey Council on the Arts Fellowship, Lois Marie Harrod to add to the list on their poetry trail.

“I am honored and delighted to be part of the Scott and Hella McVay Poetry Trail, a sanctuary for many people,” says Harrod from her Hopewell home.

She continues, “As a friend told me recently, ‘I go there when I need peace.’ Scott and Hella have spent a lifetime supporting art and science, teachers and poets. I am indebted to them, and to the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, and the Dodge Poetry Festival.”

Established in 2010, the Scott and Hella McVay Poetry Trail loops a meandering mile through the native plant meadow in Greenway Meadows Park.

They made the trail comfortable and attractive.

Furniture Designer and Fine Craftsman David Robinson created eight rustic benches for the trail, while George Zienowicz created the 50 signs.

Since then, they have dedicated several poems from poets who have strong responses to the natural world.

For example, in 2016, they dedicated a poem by the late Pulitzer-winner C.K. Williams.  (1936-2015)

Former Princeton Mayor Phyllis Marchand, chair of D&R Greenway’s Board of Trustees, opened the dedication ceremony beneath a 300-year-old Oak tree on a beautiful, sunny day.

“If you ever feel a need for healing, get out and walk on this trail,” said Marchand.

“You will feel just great, enjoying the natural connection of poetry and nature.”

With the addition of Harrod, the 50 poets are now balanced among 25 men and 25 women, note the McVays.

“I love being outside,” says Harrod. “Especially walking and hiking – Baldpate Mountain, the Sourlands St. Michaels Farm Preserve. I often write about something I have seen or experienced during these walks – though not immediately,” she adds.

Harrod says she knows that some people and even some poets are averse to nature. She appreciates that D&R Greenway, and other local environmental organizations, provide antidotes to such fears.

The author of 16 poetry collections, Harrod is the winner of the 2012 Tennessee Chapbook Contest, the 2010 Hazel Lipa Chapbook Prize, and a five-time recipient of fellowships to the Virginia Center for Creative Arts.

She has spent her life writing and teaching, most recently at the College of New Jersey and at Princeton Senior Resource Center’s Evergreen Forum.

Widely published in literary journals and online e-zines from American Poetry Review to Zone 3, her work can be read at www.loismarieharrod.org.

The poetry trail founders think Harrod’s poem winks at our humanity and deserves to join the ranks of works by Emily Dickenson, Robert Frost, Rumi/Coleman Barks, Walt Whitman, Mary Oliver, Paul Muldoon, Jane Hirshfield, Joseph Bruchac, and six U.S. Poet Laureates:  Rita Dove, Robert Haas, Stanley Kunitz, Howard Nemerov, W.S. Merwin, and Richard Wilbur, among others.

Harrod will lead an En Plein Air poetry workshop at D&R Greenway’s St. Michael’s Farm Preserve in Hopewell tomorrow, said Linda Mead, president and CEO of D&R Greenway. rsvp@drgreenway.org

— Follow Michelle Dryden on Twitter @Michelle_Dryden