Anaya Gallaccio’s Red On Green (2012) is a gradual masterpiece, a living breathing demonstration of life and death. Favoring organic materials, Gallaccio laid 10,000 red roses across the gallery floor and allowed them wilt and perish untouched. Red On Green is an aggressive gesture that holds a mirror to society’s concept of beauty and our displacement of nature.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Courtesy of Jupiter Artland.

Quiet Lunch is a grassroot online publication that seeks to promote various aspects of life and culture with a loving, but brute, educational tinge. When we say, “Creative Sustenance Daily,” we mean it.