Kansas artist carves Kamala Harris’ portrait into a field — and left room for her VP pick
July 24, 2024 | Sam Zeff
Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter.
World-renowned crop artist Stan Herd is almost finished with the portrait of the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee outside Lawrence, Kansas, near the Kansas River
Crop artist Stan Herd just had a feeling that Vice President Kamala Harris was going to ascend to the top of the Democratic ticket.
“I’m a political junkie, you know? I follow this stuff moment by moment,” he told KCUR. “It just seemed like the writing was on the wall.”
So 12 days ago — before Biden officially dropped out, but in the middle of public pressure following his disastrous debate performance — he got to work carefully crafting a giant image of Harris’ face into a half-acre field north of Lawrence in the Kansas River bottoms.
“The landowner is a little nervous about people coming out there. So, he’s not giving the exact location,” Herd said.
Herd, who is in his 70s, is a native Kansan but has created earthworks all over the world, including a four-acre permanent installation in China’s Yunnan Province called the Young Woman of China that took two years to build.
But when he must, Herd can move pretty quickly. Like when he did President Joe Biden’s portrait during the 2020 Democratic primary race.
“When he won South Carolina, I did his portrait within seven days,” Herd said.

Earthworks artist Stan Herd stands on an elevated platform to show the phrase he and his team seared into a hay field near Lawrence in January 2021. The phrase, burned in with a torch and outlined with mulch, was featured in Joe Biden’s virtual inaugural celebration; photo by Carlos Moreno, KCUR
Herd’s art was also featured in Biden’s inauguration in 2021. He and his team carefully charred the phrase, “America United” in a former hay field outside Lawrence, which was featured in a video on Inauguration Day.
It took a 12-man crew to make that project happen, although Herd said it was “the simplest image I’ve done in 25 years.” Herd and his team cut the shape first with weed trimmers, then used mulch to form an outline around the letters. Using a butane torch, they burned the interior part of the phrase to make it stand out.
At the time, Herd told KCUR he wanted to move away from political pieces — a sentiment that apparently only lasted a few years.
“This was just an opportunity, quite frankly, to get involved in this final throwdown of the inauguration after this arduous journey that we’ve all been on to try to move the country back in a direction of normalcy,” he said in 2021.

This earth works installment, created by Stan Herd, on display in Wisconsin with the words “Build Back Better”; photo courtesy of Stan Herd
The recent Harris portrait is a half acre and made of native prairie, compost and sand and paid for out of his own pocket. “When I create a big Oreo cookie ad and I make really good money, I put 10% of that back into the art that I want,” he said.
Although Herd was confident enough to begin crafting Harris’ likeness well before Biden dropped out of the race, he’s being a little more cautious before finishing the installation.
Herd left space next to Harris for whoever she picks as a running mate. He thought it would be the governor of Michigan.
“I started a portrait of Gretchen Whitmer,” he said. “And then, you know, if you wait a little bit, you learn a lot.”
From the archives: Homegrown Resonate Pictures cultivates corporate market through creative risks

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Speak easy and SprinkleSumSalt: Podcaster passes the mic to KC’s underground arts scene
Untold stories of creative talent and entrepreneurial spirit are raging beneath the surface of Kansas City’s mainstream, said Bump Jonas, who finds vibrant inspiration in musicians, chefs, and small business owners angling to reach a broader audience. “I wanted to bring something unique to Kansas City, a space where artists and entrepreneurs can connect and…
Social studies to social venture: Missouri teen’s micro business helps students across the globe
Editor’s note: The following story was produced through a paid partnership with MOSourceLink, which boasts a mission to help entrepreneurs and small businesses across the state of Missouri grow and succeed by providing free, easy access to the help they need — when they need it. ST. LOUIS — It wasn’t an entrepreneurship course that…
Small biz in Africa needs capital to grow; here’s how C2FO, World Bank member are bringing ‘much-needed liquidity’
A new strategic partnership between Kansas City-built C2FO and IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, is expected to enhance financing for local enterprises in Africa — bolstering job growth and economic prosperity in an underserved segment of the global market. “C2FO is honored and delighted to collaborate with IFC to broaden the global…
KC-brewed FairWave chases aromas east, adding Baltimore-area roaster to its coffee collective
Working with a larger, experienced leadership team and collaborating with new specialty coffee friends throughout the FairWave coffee collective will be a total game changer for Maryland-based Ceremony Coffee Roasters, said Ronnie Haas. Ceremony on Monday announced it had joined the family of brands under FairWave Specialty Coffee Collective, which is headquartered in Kansas City…
