More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
GET UPDATES FROM Annie Buckley
 

Art & Ecology: On Seeing: An Online Exhibition Series (PHOTOS)

Posted: 05/15/11 02:02 AM ET

The four artists included in this edition of "On Seeing" each address ecology and our deepening environmental concerns. Their approaches vary from temporary sculptures and installations dependent on the cycles and processes of nature to patient documentations of the intersection between humans and our environment. Each has developed a powerful body of work that poses questions while drawing both functional and metaphorical connections to the natural world.

(Commentary follows slideshow)

1 of 17
John Grade, Host, Cellulose, seeds, rice pulp, capsicum paste, 12 x 12 x 1.5 feet, 2007-2008, Sited in Kaibab National Forest, AZ.
Total comments: 24 | Post a Comment
1 of 17
Rate This Slide

  • 1

  • 2

  • 3

  • 4

  • 5

  • 6

  • 7

  • 8

  • 9

  • 10
Current Top 5 Slides
Users who voted on this slide
loading...

From the first time I learned of John Grade's work, he seems to have continually developed new and fascinating projects bridging his art practice and commitment to preservation and the environment. Those pictured here include Host, one of many of Grade's works that is in part sculpted by the environment (in this case, local birds), and The Elephant Bed, graceful forms made, as is typical of Grade's process, from biodegradable materials; at the end of this exhibition at Fabrica in Brighton, UK, the works were carried through the streets and deposited in the English Channel. Working in collaboration with nature, Grade's sculptures are elegantly engineered to function in, and often for, the specific ecosystem for which they are made.

With a similarly empathic approach, Sant Khalsa combines a sense of devotion with a steady and meticulous process in her photographic portfolios. Simultaneously beautiful and rigorous, each one functions as an archive of vital but contradictory intersections between built and natural environments. For Western Waters, Khalsa photographed nearly 200 stores hawking the most essential commodity: water. In a statement about the project, the artist noted, "plastic bottles have replaced earthen vessels." Paving Paradise (currently the subject of an exhibition, "River Run" at UCR's California Museum of Photography) lovingly and painstakingly documents transformations in the 96-mile Santa Ana River over the past 20 years.

Buster Simpson's sculptures and installations have long demonstrated a propensity for working with local environments to nurture sustainability, eliminate waste, and build awareness. Included are images from Portable Landscapes, a project inspired by the discovery of a self-generating landscape on the roof of a local Skyway Luggage Factory. Recognizing that this could provide seed stock for greening neighborhood roofs, Simpson replanted segments into suitcases, placing these in local communities with the hope that the plants be adopted. Confluence, a temporary sculpture created at the National Botanic Garden of Wales, created a gathering place informed by and integrated with the local watershed environment.

From 2005 - 2009, Samantha Fields also ventured into the landscape, documenting occurrences of extreme weather and using the resulting photographs as the basis for realistic oil paintings that seem to reverberate with the immensity of nature's power. She has traveled to sites throughout the Western US to photograph enormous storms and raging wildfires, then transformed the images into paintings. More recently, Fields has undertaken a body of work that reflects on the experience of being in nature and the ways it does and does not meet our often idealistic, even demanding, expectations; rather than gazing at nature from afar, these haunting and atmospheric paintings provide a record of lived experience from up-close.

Artists Included: John Grade, Sant Khalsa, Buster Simpson, and Samantha Fields

On Seeing is an exhibition series on The Huffington Post curated by Annie Buckley. It includes emerging and established artists from around the globe. The goal is explore the depth of how we see and reflect on art while expanding the range of ways to view art.

On Seeing is not a commercial series, but in the event that it results in a sale, participating artists and gallerists are invited to donate at least 10% of the proceeds to a charity of their choice.

 
 
 
The four artists included in this edition of "On Seeing" each address ecology and our deepening environmental concerns. Their approaches vary from temporary sculptures and installations dependent on t...
The four artists included in this edition of "On Seeing" each address ecology and our deepening environmental concerns. Their approaches vary from temporary sculptures and installations dependent on t...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 24
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nootrope
It's "no-oh-trope"
11:05 AM on 05/16/2011
All very beautiful and/or provocative. Those B/W storefront photos are amazing, the samantha field works are appropriately eerie and evocative, and the Elephant Bed is really unique and an interesting concept. Didn't care much for the buckets, but maybe I'm missing something.
07:39 AM on 05/16/2011
The South Carolina Botanical Garden has a Nature-based Sculpture Program that has produced a series of site-specific artworks that include the use of living plant material as well as stone, rammed earth, and other structural materials. Their new website is still in final development, but you can see all the sculptures there: naturebasedart.org.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Surratt
07:39 PM on 05/15/2011
I just never got "art". Oh well, more power to them. I just don't understand how making giant white Hershey Kisses is going to help anything.
05:39 PM on 05/15/2011
Annie, Thanks for posting--it's always fun to see environmentally themed art. Are you familiar with the art of Richard and Judith Lang? It's all created with beach plastic found at Pt. Reyes.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paintio
buzz or howl under the influence of heat
05:39 PM on 05/15/2011
Wow, Ms. Fields, excellent paint manipulation. And very handsome images as well.
And Buster too no less, how about that?
05:31 PM on 05/15/2011
Outstanding show and a worthy one to bring to our attention. So grateful.

Thanks you!!!!
Catherine Ruane
photo
THE GREAT PURIFIER
If you are going through hell, keep going.
04:44 PM on 05/15/2011
Raising Environmental Awareness Through Art?

More like: Raising Environmental Pollution Through Fake Art.

Leave nature alone. The poor thing does not need any of this nonsense.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AG creative
Ba Gawk!
04:57 PM on 05/15/2011
I like your style, dude.
photo
THE GREAT PURIFIER
If you are going through hell, keep going.
05:11 PM on 05/15/2011
Don't get me wrong...I love art. I truly do. But I think there is a galactic difference between Tizian and Goya and planting huge styrofoam cups on some unspoiled beach in the name of "environmental awareness".