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2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierAnyone who has ever picked up a dandelion knows how hard it is to keep the fluffy pieces from flying away, which is what makes <a href="http://www.regineramseier.ch/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=73&Itemid=79">Regine Raseier's</a> breathtaking art exhibit so impressive. The artist gently plucked <b>2,000 dandelions</b> from a nearby meadow and then sprayed a small amount of adhesive on each one to keep them intact. The dandelions were then carefully loaded en masse onto a special crate and transported to a small white room in the <a href="http://www.artoll.de/">ArToll gallery</a> in Germany.1
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierRegina Ramseier is a German artist.2
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierShe wanted to feature the transient dandelion in a semi-permanent art exhibit.3
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierThe artist painstakingly picked 2,000 dandelions from a nearby field.4
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierThese were then sprayed with a light adhesive in order to keep them intact.5
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierThe dandelions were transported to the ArToll laboratory in special crates.6
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierAt the gallery, Ramseier plugged each individual dandelion into a white board.7
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierThe board was then stuck to the ceiling.8
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierThe dandelions then hang upside down.9
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierLight from a nearby window dances over the plants10
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierThe green space outside the exhibit brings meadows to mind.11
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierThousands of dandelions standing up in rows.12
2000 Dandelions by Regina RamseierThe piece invokes the memory plucking a dandelion - only to see the fluffy parts whisked away by the wind.13













