The Dallas Coloring Book Experiment

The Dallas Coloring Book Experiment

To design a place with consideration, the design allows some things to be left to chance. Lines and edges are created that can encourage subtle adaptations. Instead of deciding every experience, there are moments for the unexpected. A designed landscape is an interpretation of a place that can be offered back to its community to be adopted as their own, and to be reinterpreted through lives and stories. In a dramatic shift of scales, a designed landscape is almost like the drawn black lines of a coloring book; it beckons to be altered and re-imagined by those who confront it with pens and pencils.

On September 6, 2015, Outsider Gwendolyn McGinn, and her partner, Isaac Cohen of buildingcommunityWORKSHOP, debuted The Dallas Coloring Book Experiment at the first Dallas Zine Party.  

The Dallas Coloring Book Experiment is a series of coloring books. They contain a collection of drawings which present different interpretations of the city. Each edition of the coloring book takes a slightly different approach to what “coloring book” means with drawings that are meant to be interacted with, colored, cut, and reimagined. Part coloring book, part interpretation of a city, part collected histories of a place.

TDCBE is an experiment in alternate ways of engaging the city. Instead of drawing projected futures, TDCBE presents line drawings of the people and places that form the city. Collections of street corners, sidewalks, and signs begin to form a visual documentation of vernacular structures of the city. Places that we see everyday, are illustrated and layered to present the memories of a place instead of a perfectly drawn architectural record of a place.

By seeking drawings from many artists and designers, The Dallas Coloring Book Experiment begins to form a collective story of Dallas created by those who inhabit it. The act of drawing and coloring one’s own city begins to form conversations of what the city is, and how else it might be imagined. The act of drawing the city presents an appreciation of the places where lives are lived and stories are told. While Reunion Tower and other iconic emblems of Dallas might tell the story of Dallas to some, its sidewalks and bus stops have deep stories of their own. 

The first series of The Dallas Coloring Book Experiment included drawings from several Outsiders. A selection of their drawings are included below. As a studio there are times for serious critical engagement, and times to playfully express the world around us. Through lines we can depicts unfinished places, and share them for others to make into their own. 

Focus on Native Texas Plants: Little Bluestem with Brian Halsell

Brian Halsell, Studio Outside Associate. Little Bluestem photo by Alexschott / CC-BY-SA-3.0

Brian Halsell, Studio Outside Associate. Little Bluestem photo by Alexschott CC-BY-SA-3.0

Schizachyrium Scoparium, also known as Little Bluestem, is a tall grass that thrives in prairie environments ranging from Canada to Mexico. It also happens to be Studio Outside Associate Brian Halsell’s favorite plant.

What exactly makes this plant unique?

“It’s drought tolerant, a good erosion control plant, a Texas native and provides an interesting look for up to 11 months out of the year,” Halsell said.

Halsell specifically appreciates the many benefits to wildlife including food, cover and nesting areas. Cattle and wild animals graze the plant, which provides seeds to birds and small mammals. In addition, the plant also hosts several skipper butterflies.

The grass is also an eye-catching plant that changes appearance with the seasons. In full sun, Little Bluestem turns an icy blue in the summer and a rust to mahogany in the fall and winter. Also, the complete seed heads, or inflorescence of the plant, showcase a striking cotton tufted appearance in the beginning of fall.

Its look gives the grass a distinctive quality; however, Little Bluestem is not alone in occupying prairie landscapes. It is one of the big four grasses of the Texas Blackland Prairie, the ecoregion where Dallas resides. Indiangrass, Big Bluestem and Switchgrass are the other grasses in the big four.

Little Bluestem's striking coloration is shown all year long. Photo by Greg Kramos  / CC-BY-SA-2.0

Little Bluestem's striking coloration is shown all year long. Photo by Greg Kramos  CC-BY-SA-2.0

Among the prairie grasses, Little Bluestem grows 18 inches to 30 inches in height. To best maintain and take care of the plant, Halsell recommends giving the grass little to no water and cutting it back in early spring to about 6 inches above grade. With the ability to look pristine with little maintenance, Little Bluestem doesn’t always get the acclaim it deserves.

“The grass is underutilized because of the reputation native grasses receive of looking too wild or weedy, especially in Dallas where evergreens are popular, “ Halsell said.

Halsell, however, realizes the beauty of Little Bluestem and the aesthetic qualities the grass brings to landscapes. This is why he incorporates the plant in mass big drifts and has highlighted the grass in various projects at Studio Outside.

Some Studio Outside projects that feature Little Bluestem include Dogwood Canyon Audubon Center, Austin Ranch Phase 6, Valley Ranch Canal Restoration and 1400 Hi-Line.

READ MORE:

Little Bluestem - Native Plants Society of Texas

Clymer Meadow Photos (Blackland Prairie) - Sean Fitzgerald Photography