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Artworks
Ann Shelton
All the blue flowers follow the sun (chicory, succory, blue sailors, coffeeweed, wild succory, blue daisy, blue dandelion, blue sailors, blueweed, bunk, coffeeweed, cornflower, hendibeh, horseweed, ragged sailors, succory, wild bachelor's buttons, and wil, 2025Archival pigment print on Hahnemühle Bamboo, framed46 x 35 in
117 x 89 cmEdition of 6 plus 2 artist's proofs$ 10,500.00The entire chicory plant is permeated by a white milky substance, a sap or white latex. Blue blooms, in small clusters, punctuate its far-reaching gangly stems. Maud Grieves tells us...The entire chicory plant is permeated by a white milky substance, a sap or white latex. Blue blooms, in small clusters, punctuate its far-reaching gangly stems. Maud Grieves tells us that “Linnaeus used the chicory as one of the flowers in his floral Clock at Uppsala, because of its regularity in opening at 5 a.m and closing at 10 a.m in that latitude. Here it closes about noon and opens between 6 and 7 in the morning.” As some of its folk names imply, the chicory flowers follow the sun.
Chicory was eaten as a vegetable in Roman times, and its root is often used as the medicinal part of the plant; it was used as a laxative, a poultice and for its diuretic effects. It is also a well-known substitute for coffee. Chicory contains inulin, a sugar substitute, and is part of the preparation of Bach flower remedies. In European folklore it is associated with opening doors, removing obstacles and granting invisibility.
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