Environmental Video Art

Eyes as Big As Plates:

  • Artists who engage in an acts of camouflage, human relationships with environment/other beings, environmental immersion, environmental portraits

https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20200617-eyes-as-big-as-plates-remarkable-photos-of-people-in-nature

Tim Knowles:

Lesbian Rangers

  • Creating new environmental artist-institutions, personae, creating new field guides and rewriting established scripts, queering nature, campy interventions
  • https://vimeo.com/132492078

https://vimeo.com/132492078

Tania Willard

Rebecca Belmore:

  • Protesting colonization, racism, and talking to the land/other beings
Speaking To Their Mother (1991) Rebecca Belmore

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=2380887132177300

Future Farmers:

Kate Patterson:

  • Exploring meaning in found objects, new forms for understanding deep time, poetic/spiritual or sacred relationships to nature.

Lindsay Dobbin:

  • Sound resonating in the landscape, exploring silence, stillness, working with participants, performance

https://www.cbc.ca/i/phoenix/player/syndicate/?mediaId=2677039088

see also Futurefarmers – sound in landscape

https://vimeo.com/manage/videos/862742873

Wolfgang Laib:

  • Collecting materials to arrange and present them in new forms, stillness, new ways to see time

Jenny Kendler:

  • Listening to animals, alternative relationships to animals, relating ourselves to animals, forms of mediated listening

BJORK!

See the feature article and the video for FOSSORA:

https://pitchfork.com/news/watch-bjorks-psychedelic-new-fossora-video/Sara Angelucci

See several projects by Sara Angelucci – Ghost Orchard, Mourning Chorus, The Twirl of a Butterfly’s Tongue… etc.

https://sara-angelucci.ca/filter/Projects

https://sara-angelucci.ca/filter/Projects/The-Twirl-of-A-Butterfly-s-Tongue2022

From Ghost Orchard, Sara Angelucci, 2022.

Corpus Dance Projects

Natasha Lavdovsky

http://www.natashalavdovsky.com/

Atmosphere manipulation

Lichen works

Plastic Bag

Aislinn Thomas

Rock Camoflauge

Mountains Used To Be Ugly

Darcy Wilson

https://www.darcywilson.org/felia-and-1-fan

https://www.darcywilson.org/protect-your-love

AATOOQ:

https://nac-cna.ca/en/video/dtl-aatooq-Ikumagialiit

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Artists Reckoning with Climate Change

  1. Read the article attached:

What is the ethical duty of artists?

Environmentalist Bill McKibben asked –

“Where are the books? The poems? The plays? The goddamn operas?” he wrote in an op-ed for Grist. “Compare it to, say, the horror of AIDS … which has produced a staggering outpouring of art that, in turn, has had real political effect.” For future generations looking back on the present, “the single most significant item will doubtless be the sudden spiking temperature. But they’ll have a hell of a time figuring out what it meant to us.”

What can art and artists actually do?

Chicago-based curator and early supporter of environmental art Stephanie Smith cautioned that a glut of superficially righteous exhibitions could give hits of easy virtue to viewers and museums alike –

“If sustainability or climate change become art trends du jour, we risk providing a palliative to ourselves and to our audiences without contributing much to artistic production, nuanced debate or lasting social change”

How are artists representing the environment?

Representing nature as the sublime and untouched – Thomas Cole

Spoiled and poisoned, developed – Ed Burtinsky

https://www.cbc.ca/radio/sunday/solitary-confinement-edward-burtynsky-manjusha-mail-tent-cities-anne-carson-1.3820890/the-beauty-and-the-horror-in-edward-burtynsky-s-photographs-1.3822594

How are contemporary artists re-imagining our place in the natural world, and proposing alternative relationships with our environment?

Imagining alternative relationships – Mary Mattingly, Future Farmers

Just over a mile up the Bronx River from Hunts Point, Mary Mattingly has docked her newest floating project, Swale, a garden on a 130-by-40-foot steel barge. After discovering it is illegal to forage or even grow food in public parks in New York City, Mattingly conceived of producing a forest of edible plants on the water, to circumvent those laws and let people gather food for free.

https://www.artnews.com/gallery/art-in-america/aia-photos/swale/2-12165/

Educating/making the scope of the catastrophe felt – and ACTUAL remediation: Alana Bartol

https://alanabartol.com/home.html

Bartol is interested in reciprocal relationships to land, and asks – “How do (I and other settlers) actually relate to land, and to what it’s already communicating?

She is exploring “extractive capitalism” while simultaneously “entangled with and benefitting from it.”

Artists transforming our experience of time/scale of our lives relative to the world – John Cage, Katie Patterson

https://www.nytimes.com/svc/oembed/html/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2020%2F09%2F07%2Farts%2Fmusic%2Fjohn-cage-as-slow-as-possible-germany.html#?secret=AdVKnomLifhttps://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/07/arts/music/john-c.https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/07/arts/music/john-cage-as-slow-as-possible-germany.html#:~:text=The%20long%2C%20slow%20performance%20of,change%20%E2%80%94%20the%20first%20since%202013.

KP: Fossil Necklace

KP: Future Library

https://www.mindfood.com/article/smart-thinker-katie-patersons-future-library/

  • Artists modelling/embodying alternative cultures and worldviews –Tania Willard, Bush Gallery

BUSH MANIFESTO:

READ THE MANIFESTO:
https://cmagazine.com/issues/136/bush-manifesto

Protest, as a public performance – Public Studio

From the Declaration of Responsibilities and Guarantee of Rights and Freedoms, Public Studio, 2018, Toronto.

Was really surprised to find two different books with Liberace LOL. I these books are all from the Scottish History and Food sections on the second floor. I was really curious about representation and abstraction with the books and how a lack of text can be just as powerful a tool. In trying to connect the first and last book, I worked to assemble books to tell a story of Liberace cooking, something going wrong, and then him dying and becoming a ghost.

I tried to illustrate this idea through colour and book size juxtaposition. The first is happy, floral (also about geography) as if he’s happily performing. The next two are exactly the same size but different shades and quality, as if to represent the cooking has begun but something goes sour. The large red book is much bigger and louder in my mind, representing an explosion. The black to me represents a kind of stasis..the white book following is haggard, brighter, and same length as the black, representing a kind of harmoniousness.

Looking at it a week later, I agree that the story doesn’t really come across through…However, fun warm up and I enjoyed getting to surf through the stacks!

I branched out from the second floor and looked at titles from the military, social studies, and women & gender studies stacks on the third floor.

I think at this point, I got too focused on the text and creating a poem. I was feeling reminiscent and cumbersome while making this. I was thinking about some kind of tumultuous affair between two enemies/lovers. Loved finding two different, yet connected texts that had to do with dance. I was also very curious about the use of punctuation….do you read it as the end of a sentence? or can it just be ignored. In the case, I tried to use the punctuation to illicit a break in the sentence.

Seeing how the stacks tilts from weight distribution is making me think I should look at smaller stacks.

I ran out of time at the library and sought to play around from the books in my apartment. These…don’t really have much connection to nature but I had fun coming up with different arrangements. In this stack, I was thinking of myself….First week of classes are always a bit chaotic and I was finding myself running late, having tech problems, and apologizing a lot….Feeling like Wendy Master of Art, The Disaster Artist. This to me reads like an omnipresent voice giving some kind of prophetic or spiritual advice. Not bad advice for sure. I’m curious by the shape of the stack – how it descends and returns to place at the last book.

At the top is “13 ways to kill your community” and 13 books below describing just that. I loved the mix and contrast between the fonts and subject matter. As I built this stack, I began thinking of this more from a writing perspective and less of a visual or material perspective. I used to write satire part-time and so to me, the stack took on more of a script.

While assembling the stack, I was thinking a lot about the fonts could work with and against each other . I began thinking through the voices of two characters that would be on a  “I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson” sketch. I was imagining two men filming some kind of Alex Jones-ish propaganda ad. The first guy is really mad, listing off progressive things that would contribute to a community’s decline. The camera would flip to the second guy, and carrying the same energy, he would list off things that just make him mad; “GRAPE FRUIT” “DUTY FREE AT THE AIRPORT” “LARRY GORMAN that sonofaBItch”.

I thought it would be funny to add a (fittingly New Brunswick centred) cookbook underneath a book about publicized family conflict as if to stick a quaint, nostalgic, maybe even satirical PR bandaid over them.

I also don’t consider NB as a great food hub so the idea of a New Brunswick centred cookbook from from members of a rich, white, loyalist family who probably have hired cooks is funny to me. Like something out of Succession.

Shawna Dempsey and Lori Millan Presentation

Environmental Art Video! With Lily

Bird in Hand – First attempt at making spreads

Jellied Salad Zine (Multiples project)

THE WIND/THE WEATHER/THE WATER

From: Sunrise & Sunset at Praiano combines Lewitt’s minimal formalism with organic imagery. Lewitt presents photographs of the sky taken on the coast of Praiano, Italy over ocean waters. Though the images themselves are unruly in a literal sense—the sky does not adhere to imposed structures of logic—Lewitt integrates them into his familiar systems and organization . There are four images per page, neatly arranged in a square grid, reminiscent of Lewitt’s former publications comprising only lines and other drawn elements. Sol Lewitt, 1980.

Collaborative Artist Book Assignment:

See ongoing deadlines for work in progress, design workshops and final templates on class schedule.

Together with the class we will create the content for, and design and publish an original artist book on the motifs of “The Wind”, “The Weather” and “The Water”.

The artist book for our class will emphasize image over text and be an artwork in its own right. It can be any length or size available on Blurb.com under a budget of $30.

Throughout the term we will be collecting images from class exercises, field trips, assignments and research. You can also capture new images and spontaneous moments related to the themes. Post high resolution images on your blog pages, and prepare to share them, and potentially have them used in spreads along with other images in our final book.

In class we will participate in a book publishing workshop, and see a collection of artist books, in addition to the works of other artists on the theme.

Assignment: ARTIST PRESENTATIONS

Shawna Dempsey and Lori Milan, Lesbian Parks and Services

____________________________________________________________________

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DURATION: 5-10 MINUTES (presentations will be strictly timed)

Present the work of a contemporary artist working with environmental themes and materials.

You must present images and/or video to illustrate the work of the artist. Describe three  of the artist’s works in detail (or ONE major project), from past works to more recent projects.

Discuss the themes, ideas, and media at play in the works, and the artist’s unique methods of producing and presenting artworks. Select works that specifically deal with themes from nature and the environment, weather/climate, or other relevant topics.

All of the works should be presented as a concise post on the course blog. Use images and embedded videos as needed. You may cut and paste descriptive segments, but this must be indicated and sources should be linked/credited.

Presentations will be evaluated for:

 Evidence of intensive research, depth of engagement

Understanding of ideas, artistic strategies and external contexts at play in the work

  Readability of images/texts/video as posted

  Comprehensibility and flow of oral presentation

Artists (will be assigned in class):

Future Farmers

Shawna Dempsey and Lori Milan

Jae Rhim Lee

Jason Logan/Make Ink

Nina Katchadourian

Tim Knowles


Ron Benner

Mark Dion

Mary Mattingly

Andrea Zittel

Terrence Houle and Trevor Freeman

Ursula Johnson


Jenny Kendler

Lindsay Dobbin

Week 2

Monday:

Critique for Book Stacks on the theme of WEATHER.

All work must be posted on blog.

Assignments:

  1. THE WIND/THE WEATHER/THE WATER: Collaborative book project- see ongoing deadlines in schedule. Students will post works and images on the themes on blog page – throughout the term.
  2. ENVIRONMENTAL ARTIST PRESENTATIONS: Due Wednesday Sept. 28th in class.

Wednesday:

Meet in the class – discuss snapshot exercise.

SNAPSHOT EXERCISE Take snapshots of the following things during our arboretum walk:

  1. Round things
  2. A piece of sky – let’s try to capture the whole thing together
  3. WEED NOTICING – see Alana Bartol:https://alanabartol.com/section/514344-Weed%20Notice%21%20%26%20Other%20Acts%20of%20Noticing.html

Walk together to the arboretum to meet Michelle.

All photos may be used in our class book.

HOMEWORK: On Monday next week, you will be discussing this reading in class: How Should Art Reckon with Climate Change https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/25/t-magazine/art-climate-change.html

On Wednesday your ARTIST PRESENTATION is due – maximum time is 10 minutes!

Book Stacks

LOOK AT: Nina Katchadourian’s Book Stacks projects

“The Sorted Books project began in 1993, and it has has taken place on many different sites over the years, ranging form private homes to specialized book collections. The process is the same in every case: I sort through a collection of books, pull particular titles, and eventually group the books into clusters so that the titles can be read in sequence. The final results are shown either as photographs of the book clusters or as the actual stacks themselves, often shown on the shelves of the library they came from. Taken as a whole, the clusters are a cross-section of that library’s holdings that reflect that particular library’s focus, idiosyncrasies, and inconsistencies. They sometimes also function as a portrait of the particular book owner. The Sorted Books project is an ongoing project which I add to almost each year, and there there are hundreds of images in the ongoing archive to date.”

Pictured above: What is Art?
C-prints, each 12.5 x 19 inches, 1996/2008
The series Sorting Shark from the Sorted Books project
Pictured above: A Day at the Beach
C-prints, each 12.5 x 19 inches, 2001

Read Katchadourian’s descriptions of the unique libraries she worked in to make the series Sorted Books.

The series Kansas Cut-Up from the Sorted Books project
Pictured above: Only Yesterday
C-prints, each 12.5 x 19 inches, 2014

Dave Dyment:

ONE BILLION YEARS [PAST AND FUTURE], 2012
A collection of books pertaining to the past and future, arranged chronologically from One Billion Years Ago to The Next Billion Years.

Ryan Park:

Ryan Park, 2009, Untitled

WATCH:

https://youtube.com/watch?v=A24MRdNMOIA%3Fenablejsapi%3D1%26autoplay%3D0%26cc_load_policy%3D0%26cc_lang_pref%3D%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26loop%3D0%26modestbranding%3D0%26rel%3D1%26fs%3D1%26playsinline%3D0%26autohide%3D2%26theme%3Ddark%26color%3Dred%26controls%3D1%26

Nina Katchadourian discusses a new Sorted Books project in William S Burroughs’ library.

 What are some of the strategies Katchadourian, Dyment and Park used to select and order books in their final works? What were their decisions based on, and how do the final compositions expand the meaning of each individual book, or come together to have a new and surprising meaning about the library, the family, about language and books, or about anything else?

Book Stacks Assignment:

Make 3 of your own Sorted Books stacks – use your own personal library or visit another personal or public library.

Consider using books to create new images, suprising compositions in language, and forms out of a stack of books. You might respond to words, colours, images, forms, and more in your stacks. Line things up with intention, and illuminate your stacks to take high quality images.

Be respectful of library patrons and staff when collecting books and taking photographs, and return books to trolleys/follow rules please.

Create a composition, with as many books as you may need, and photograph it. Look for concise messages, play with words and concepts with what is at hand. Consider other features of the books – scale, material, colours, and context in the library in your stacks. Avoid clichés and easy statements – be open to accidents and funny surprises, experiment with different titles in relation to one another in different ways. Your stack might be a portrait of a person, a quippy commentary about a historical moment, an ironic collision of surprising titles… be prepared to talk about your choices and how they might be readable to a wider audience.

Include THREE FINAL images, a short description of your stacks, and your process of creating the compositions on your blog page.

Week 1

Introductions

Syllabus and assignments

Tech orientation to studio, blogs, equipment, computers with Nathan

Assignment: Book Stacks – On Weather

Demo on using cameras/phones for fast in the world shooting/high res. with Nathan

On Wednesday we will meet in class and walk together to the library to work on site.

Artists who explore weather:

WEDNESDAY:

Meet in class to sign out photography equipment.

We will go together to the library to work on Book Stacks on the theme of ‘weather’.

ALL posts with 3 book stack images, including notes and prep work due on the blog for discussion in class on MONDAY (week 3)

Samantha’s work

Book Stacks – Assignment One

A few weeks ago, while giving a tour of the U of G campus, I ended up getting lost in the library. As I searched for the exit, I ended up in the basement of the library – a place I always found myself too nervous to enter previously. I wandered the space and curiously approached the bookshelves. The basement is home to lots of government publications and periodicals with topics ranging from natural resources to psychological journals to food consumption. I found this collection extremely interesting due to the richness of its history, as well as the feeling of loneliness that accompanied it. The sign-out cards hint that most of this collection of literature has not been touched in years – decades even. For these reasons, I chose to isolate the basement of the library as my first focus for the bookstack assignment. 

My process started with finding an area that would be suitable for photos, while also not bothering any students who may be working in the space. After I found a spot to set up, I browsed several shelves of text and picked out titles that I thought sounded interesting. I found it much easier to work with books that had short titles compared to longer titles, so as I returned to the shelves to pick out more books I tried to focus on titles one to three words long. 

For the weather component, I found titles that were organized based on season. I find it interesting how seasons and weather are a telling sign of the passage of time, yet also highlight the cyclical nature of time itself. Even the university uses seasons to express the passage of time from one semester to another, while also bringing to light the cyclical nature of a school setting.

The equipment that I used to take my photos included a DSLR camera borrowed from the university, as well as a ringlight that I brought from home. It was fun to play around with the camera settings and lighting, and I think in the end I got several usable photos. I am not very experienced with photography, but as I started to get used to the camera settings I found that my images came out much better than I anticipated. There is certainly a huge learning curve when it comes to using a DSLR in comparison to a simple point-and-shoot camera, but the payoff is very evident.

Stack #1Wordplay/Poetry

My first book stack was an attempt at a rhyming poem (?). I chose these books from a large stack of titles I gathered, and just sort of rearranged them until the stack felt readable. I like how the colours ended up being on the cool side, with the exception of the word EVIDENCE. I do find the small text makes this composition difficult to read without zooming in, though.

Stack #2Framing

For this composition, I wanted to play around with the lighting and framing to see how these aspects play into or complement a bookstack. How does dramatic lighting communicate the stack when compared to normal lighting? Then, using other books on either side of the stack I attempted to create the illusion of a naturally occurring bookstack – merely found that way on a library shelf. It was fun to play around with these aspects of my photos, but less fun to move all the books around.

Stack #3Mood/Atmosphere/Lighting

The title ‘My City Was Gone’ was too haunting in this lonely library basement for me to not pick up. I was trying to avoid a cliche reference to the pandemic and was worried that this stack would read as corny. However, my classmates showed a positive reaction when I presented the images in class, and now I really like them and think they are my most successful shots. I experimented with the lighting and ended up with some very dramatic shots. I am really thankful that I brought lighting because I do not think that my library bookstacks would have been as successful without it.

Library/Camera Comparison – Personal Bookshelf

Stack A – What’s in a Name

This stack is only composed of titles that include a character’s name. Read from top to bottom, the first letter of each name spells out F-A-K-E, as all of these characters are fictitious.

Stack B – Wordplay

This composition was made with the intention of communicating the ‘last words’ as an individual’s final performance.

Stack C – Forecast Pattern

This final composition was made taking inspiration from weather forecast patterns. Using blue/grey book covers to communicate cloudy weather and orange/red book covers to communicate sunny weather, I illustrated a 5-day weather forecast pattern. This was compared to the crochet forecast blankets that have been made by artisans. The titles in this stack are not meant to be important, however, this intention can get lost if a viewer does not already know the meaning behind the stack. In my reshoot, I took this into consideration and made some adjustments to how this stack was shot.

Re-shoot with DSLR

After I was left unsatisfied with the photos of my personal books, I signed out a DSLR and got to work reshooting these stacks.

What’s in a Name

Famous Last Words

Weather Patterns

While I love the quality of the DSLR photos, I do find them to be a little bit yellow. I think with some editing this could be fixed. I used different positioning and angles for the last bookstack to bring attention away from the titles and focused on the colours. I think this change solved the issue that my first attempt at this stack faced.

Most Successful Shots

Walk in the Arboretum

During the walk in the Arboretum, I really wanted to challenge myself to take high-quality images with my phone camera. I had tried to use the app ProShot for the bookstacks assignment but opted for a DSLR when my photos constantly came out blurry and overexposed. I dedicated this outing to learning how to overcome and correct the issues I was facing, and just hoped that I would come out with something to show for it.

Diane teaching us about weeds

Round Things

Sky

The sky just before it started to rain.

Weeds

White balance – cloudy vs sunny settings

Taking photos of weeds was my favourite part of the walk. I ended up losing the group fairly quickly as I got distracted taking photos of all the weeds and plants around. I think this experience helped me a lot to experiment with the manual phone camera app and proved to myself that I can take high-quality images just using my phone camera. (Although I do still think DSLRs are irreplaceable to an extent.)

ARTIST ASSIGNMENT

JENNY KENDLER

b. 1980, New York City

Jenny Kendler is an ecological artist and activist who is credited with work that focuses on climate change and biodiversity loss. She is passionate about otherness and the de-centring of humans in a more-than-human world – a common theme in the work she produces. Kendler tends to make sculptural representations of thought-provoking ecological subject matter using materials that are reclaimed and repurposed. She has also used organic mediums like bones and fossilized genetic material of endangered species in her work and prompts discussion surrounding extinction and what we currently stand to lose.

Amber Archive (2018-ongoing)

Amber Archive is a project that started in 2018 and is still in progress. The piece is composed of amber nodules that contain a piece of genetic material (fur, leaf, bone, scale, feather, insect wing) of a species that is currently endangered. The piece acts as an analog genetic time capsule that will preserve the DNA of a species for millennia, and outlast cryobanks that rely on energy.

Forget Me Not (2020)

Forget Me Not is a piece that uses a decorated vintage boombox inspired by “Sailor’s Valentines” – elaborate mosaics made using colourful seashells, a popular gift from those returning from sea voyages in the 18th and 19th centuries. “Think of me, when far away” and “forget me not” were popular messages. Kendler’s Forget Me Not is her love letter to the sea as it slowly acidifies due to climate change and the burning of fossil fuels. The boombox plays a tape labelled “soothing ocean sounds” in which the sound of ocean acidification can be heard. Really being played is the sound of the artist’s baby teeth as they dissolve in acid.

Whale Balls (2019-ongoing)

ombre glass, Miocene-era fossilized whale ear bones

1985 moratorium on commercial whaling was finally enacted, but only 5% of humpbacks remained

populations since recovering, but other threats such as commercial shipping noise, fossil fuel seismic exploration and military sonar

Humpback’s unique sonic culture and future survival of species are jeopardized by the acoustic pollution of our oceans. 

bells clappers are Miocene Epoch fossilized ear bones: tympanic bullae from an ancient species of rorqual whale related to modern humpbacks

the part of the ear which once received sound, now creates a new fragile resonance, a mournful echo, a ghost knell-suggesting a message from these long extinct whales to today’s endangered whales

Shroud for an Atheist (2020)

digitally printed silk textile, Textile Cone (Conus textile) shell

Conus textile is a species of marine snail with a beautiful patterned shell known as the Textile Cone or Cloth of Gold Cone

they are infact predatory, venomous mollusks with toxins deadly to huans

collage of digital images of the shell’s patterns to create a textile 

presented atop a burial mound of sand, likeness of a shroud

whose death are we to lament? – the patterns of Conus textile recall cellular automata

Conway’s Game of Life or Wolfram’s Rule 30 

  • computational models said to prove that complex design and intelligent organization can arise in the absence of a “designer”

Heirloom (in private collection)

Hackberries 

amorphous hydrated silicon oxide – technically a precious gemstone opal 

seeds also contain high concentration of carbon-14, making them useful for archeological radiocarbon dating – a valuable technology used by archeologists and paleobotanists to date prehistoric sites – which may be endangered due to the ancient carbon released into the atmosphere where we burn fossil fuels

fear in science community that radiocarbon dating will no longer be viable as early as 2030 – yet another infrequently mentioned threat of climate change

Mending Wall (2021-2024)

collaborative project with the public, Kendler and the Field Museum’s Pandemic Collections Team, with support from the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE)

drawing on the American vernacular form of the stone wall – Mending Wall offers a space to honor our collective grief – and share individual hopes and fears in the moment of intersecting crises

global pandemic, gun violence epidemic, the worsening climate crisis, and interrelated struggle for racial justice

piece inspired by Robert Frost’s classic poem, Ursula Le Guin’s Earthsea novels and the artist’s childhood visit to the Wailing Wall

25 ft fragment of dry-stacked stone wall made of reclaimed Chicago cobble stone

surrounding wall is natural area of perennial plants and organic stone seating to provide space for contemplation and appreciation of the natural world

wall as something that keeps us apart, as well as how we the people can constitute form, building city stone by stone

public invited to leave a message from this moment of crisis to be archived by the Pandemic Collections team at the Field Museum

Public events held in the space, including guided meditations, dance performances, poetry readings and mending workshops

Book-Making :

Scanner Work

Artist Multiples

lighters

bullshit button