Our research programs have evolved over the years to facilitate more and more specialized study. Biophilia was once the name of our general biology and naturalism course that features our favorite topics and science communicators. When our name changed from the Ayatana Artists' Research Program, we changed the Biophilia course to Symbiosis, a general biology interest course that highlighted the conections between species. Instead of a talk on butterflies, we host a talk on the relationship between Monarchs and Milk Weed. Instead of a talk on seaweed, we have a talk on the ecology of Kelp forests and keystone species. This focus naturally lead to a Dysbiosis, a course on invasive species, which naturally evolved into Rewild, a course on practical conservation and ecological philosophy. You can find all the artists who have participated in these courses here.
We have had the pleasure of studying ecology and conservationwith the following artists
Click on images to see more about each artist.
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Ashlee Mays, Pigeon Forge, TN
Biophilium Research Leader
Director of the Museum of Infinate Outcomes
It is one thing to say something, it is another thing to write it down, and it is a completely different thing to carve, engrave, design, and print that same thing. My work focuses on these symbols that signify our human desires, and their motion. Their motion through both their mechanization of production, and the way they disseminate into banality.
Many of my pieces move from place to place, sometimes through space and sometimes through ownership. Printmaking provides the conceptual spine that supports my interdisciplinary practice. My art pieces are almost always interactive, asking the viewer to physically place themselves in this portrait of connectivity.
Nowadays we do not rely on movable type to get us our daily news. It seems that we no longer rely on the accuracy of the artist’s hand to illustrate scientific information. Printmaking mobilized the first information revolution. We are experiencing another one, and this one did not appear out of thin air. I am looking to expose the seemingly invisible lines that connect our day to day experiences with a larger mechanism. It appears to me that Botanists are sometimes doing the same thing.
The parking ticket you got last week, the souvenir from your last vacation- these artifacts all have a complex history. They quietly shape an experience that you are actively participating in. |
Mary Abma, Bright's Grove, Ontario
Biophilium Teacher's Assistant

Mary Abma is a versatile artist who specializes in community-engaged artworks and environmental art. Always up for new challenges, Mary seeks constantly to push the edges of her practice and to learn new skills and information. Her artworks, which consist primarily of idea-based works executed in a variety of artistic forms, explore the theme of “place”. Her work embraces her interest in history, her concern for the environment, her passion for science, and her desire to find visual expression for her insights into the living world and the interconnectedness of systems. Mary’s recent works explore the systems of language and communication within the natural world.
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Laura Ahola, Pocatello, ID
I pay close attention to the world around me, from politics to science, so that I am not only prepared to respond in my work to issues but so I can differentiate in what demands my attention as an artist. Currently, I am responding to climate crisis. Extensive reading into geology, plant physiology, algae, history and climate science inform my body of work. Merging the ambiguous with scientific data results in layers upon layers of paint, metaphors and imagery in my work.
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Michelle Bunton
Ontario, Canada
Michelle Bunton is a transdisciplinary artist/curator/derby jammer currently residing as an uninvited guest in Katarokwi-Kingston. They are one-quarter of the micropress Small Potatoes, and one-half of the artist-duo Tear Jerkers.
Prioritizing femi-queer science, SF (speculative fabulation/science fiction) and diffractive pedagogy, they aim to embody a collaborative praxis that centres queer kinship. Bunton playfully embraces the potential of failure, uncertainty and decay in their practice, often taking up sport and science as framework for their multi-media installations. Their recent work turns to slime mold/lichen/fungi and their attendant characteristics of collective action, decentralized organization and abject re-composition of matter. |
Crystal Crow, Rosemère, Quebec
@CrystaLynnWrites
Twitter: @_CrystaLynn_
Obsessed with otherness, I am a translator and a writer and a poet. Reading the world, writing it anew. Changing perspectives. A child of the 80s, I grew up poor in America, exploring the rich places accessible to me: the woods and fields beyond the trailer park. Seeing the creeks and rivers flood over, over and over, washing the fossil beds free of soil, free of the prairie’s black gold, exposing preserved remains. Where have the monarchs of my childhood gone?
I still see the milkweed bleeding in my small hands. Bitter white by the cornfield plowed over again to make way for condos and roads and more condos. The soil’s gone gray. Where have the monarchs of my childhood gone?
Rooted in grief and loss, my practice is about the beautiful things I remember, the beautiful things I see. And what could be. I pin them on the page. Dry wings, kindling. Around the fire, I tell stories built around human and nonhuman perspectives, inviting readers to move beyond an anthropocentric view. We disappear when a way of life consumes. Exhibit A. Flickering out like the monarchs of childhood gone.
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Chloe Lundrigan, St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador
My current art practice is an exercise in observing the negotiations and representations of nature in Atlantic Canadian culture, as informed by my own experiences both growing up there and in the ecotourism tourism sector. Iʼm interested in the increasing plasticity̶or Bass-Pro-ification, thus commodification̶of this image, and use a combination of found objects, appropriated commercial text, and digital media to explore the
powers and vulnerabilities of recalcitrant ecologies (my love, the mudflats of the Bay of Fundy), shared language between queer and survivalist cultures, and a place for atonement in environmentalism.
In my developing academic work in the field of Folklore (the social transmission of informal art histories), I am focused on Newfoundlandʼs seabirds, examining the history of the extinction of the Great auk through ritual studies in contrast to the islandʼs current outwards facing identity̶the “Puffin Province”̶by speaking with its ornithologists, citizen scientists, and local bird lovers, ultimately making a case for the importance of creative traditions and community involvement in conservation science initiatives. Chloe Lundrigan (they) is an artist, arts-worker, and nature interpreter of settler descent raised in Miʼkmaʼki, the ancestral and unceded land of the Miʼkmaq (Sackville, NB) and currently based on the island of so-called Newfoundland, the traditional territory of diverse Indigenous groups including the Beothuk, Mʼikmaq, Innu and Inuit.
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Francine Dulong, Halifax, Nova Scotia
I am a physical theatre artist and vocal improviser with a burgeoning practice in sound and music composition. My participatory theatre company, Blooming Ludus, explores humanity’s connection to the planet. I am also a member of THAT! ensemble, a London UK based improv group that uses dance, theatre and movement to compose live vocal music. |
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July 2022

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Ashlee Mays, Teacher's Assistant
Pigeon Forge, TN
As a printmaker, most of the pieces I make derive from some kind of book structure. The structure of a book is simple and its function is intuitive. While books are generally static objects, they are built to be in motion. The spine of a book demonstrates just the right amount of flexibility to allow access. The book form is a vehicle for information, information that was important enough to mechanize and disseminate. Printmaking for me has always been about a mechanism.
It is one thing to say something, it is another thing to write it down, and it is a completely different thing to carve, engrave, design, and print that same thing. My work focuses on these symbols that signify our human desires, and their motion. Their motion through both their mechanization of production, and the way they disseminate into banality. Many of my pieces move from place to place, sometimes through space and sometimes through ownership. Printmaking provides the conceptual spine that supports my interdisciplinary practice. My art pieces are almost always interactive, asking the viewer to physically place themselves in this portrait of connectivity. Nowadays we do not rely on movable type to get us our daily news. It seems that we no longer rely on the accuracy of the artist’s hand to illustrate scientific information. Printmaking mobilized the first information revolution. We are experiencing another one, and this one did not appear out of thin air. I am looking to expose the seemingly invisible lines that connect our day to day experiences with a larger mechanism. It appears to me that Botanists are sometimes doing the same thing. The parking ticket you got last week, the souvenir from your last vacation- these artifacts all have a complex history. They quietly shape an experience that you are actively participating in. |

Eric Millikin, Richmond, VA
21% of Americans believe in witches. 33% of Americans believe alien spacecraft have visited Earth. Myself? I believe witches and UFOs are actually the same thing, but I’m not sure I still believe in my fellow Americans. My new media artwork explores the intersections of advanced technology, American society, dark humor, and occult practices. I use techniques like biological art, artificial intelligence, video projection mapping, and vegetative tissue culture cloning to address my research into topics like species extinction, global climate change, and economic injustice. Currently based in Detroit, Michigan, and Richmond, Virginia, I come from a working-class family, growing up in a mobile home in the woods of rural Michigan. I am a first-generation
college student who earned my BFA from Michigan State University and my MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University. I am currently an adjunct professor at Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts, where I teach 3D Computer Art and Augmented Reality. My artwork has been featured in WIRED, USA Today, and The New York Times. My work has been included in recent exhibitions at the Royal Scottish Academy in Edinburgh, Charles University in Prague, and the Festival and Congress Centre in Varna, Bulgaria. I bring a wide range of experiences to my work, including as a human anatomy lab technician, alternative visual journalist, and descendant of Salem Witch Trial victims. |
Mary Abma, Bright's Grove, Ontario
Mary Abma is a versatile artist who specializes in community-engaged artworks and environmental art. Always up for new challenges, Mary seeks constantly to push the edges of her practice and to learn new skills and information. Her artworks, which consist primarily of idea-based works executed in a variety of artistic forms, explore the theme of “place”. Her work embraces her interest in history, her concern for the environment, her passion for science, and her desire to find visual expression for her insights into the living world and the interconnectedness of systems. Mary’s recent works explore the systems of language and communication within the natural world.
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Fenna Kosfeld, London, United Kingdom
How can we find empathy for the things around us? How can art function as a tool to generate a consciousness that makes us care and appreciate our environment? How can we make sense of our being and acting on this planet?
Those questions are guiding and following me throughout my practice, while I am looking at them from different speculative or material-based processes.
In my practice I am influenced by different activities and methods that build my research and process outcome. On the one hand, observation and research of natural phenomena are key for me to trigger a sense of wonder, which is the base for an ecological and ethical appreciation. By experimenting with various materials through different methods such as microscoping, assembling or photography and editing, I want to overcome `the natural restriction of my human perception, to explore multiple angles, perspectives and levels of material and things (living and non-living), that I would otherwise not be able to recognise and appreciate.
At the same time, material exploration inspires me to create functional light objects that put the aesthetics of nature into a lived and experienced context. Light is the giver of presence and without it there would not be any life, or science, or art. Hence, shining light on something physically and metaphorically, is what makes us aware, makes us appreciate and consequently act within this world |
Alyssa Roggow, Great Falls, Montana
When I was three, migrating monarchs came to rest on the linden tree in my parents’ backyard, and for a single magical afternoon the tree shimmered, a black-and-orange kaleidoscope of butterflies. I spent the rest of my childhood waiting for them to return.
Migration is a normal part of life for a monarch, but I was overcome with wonderment and grief at the brief transformation of my familiar surroundings. My work as a musician, writer, and composer arises from a deep awe of unexpected encounters with “the Other”, and seeks to honor the vivid emotions and sensory experiences that arise in such moments. I am inspired by natural systems and phenomena, and my creative process continually morphs to meet the environments, materials, and subjects of the work on their own terms, so I can listen more closely to what they are trying to say. |

Sha’Tuon Simpson, Las Vegas, Nevada
I am creating work that explores my lived experience and emotions in a fem-queer-black body. Through physical and digital media including animation, video-projection, printmaking, ink, and clay; I personify various aspects of my thoughts as digestible stories to then selectively share with audiences. In working with a variety of media I am able to experiment with the idea of knowing myself. I incorporate themes and forms of nature within my work as a way to physically and mentally ground myself in space. I use plants as they're something that I've always been fond of and the natural world has taken care of me. In response to that, I also want to take care of it in return. As I experiment more with my practice I realize how taking care of things like plants has also helped me take care of myself. The materials and techniques I use draw from a place of comfort. I have a tendency to incorporate natural motifs and plant life within my work as both image and material. By incorporating these aspects I’m able to act upon the isolation made between artist and audience. My emotions and how I am as a person affect my artistry and vice versa. Ink has an immediacy to it that the process of ceramics and animation does not. That has always drawn me to it. My love of storytelling is strong enough to share it with others, and I'm willing to put myself in that spotlight for a second. |

Leah Sobsey
I became a photographer because of the medium’s power to reveal—metaphorically and literally. My earliest memories of the darkroom are of those exhilarating moments when an image first floats into view, slowly revealing its mystery. This liminal space of emergence, between obscurity and exposure, is at the heart of my work as a visual artist. |

Maria L Schechter, Carmel, Indiana
T6DH stands for The Six Directions of Healing. An accident provided me an opportunity to explore my inner architecture. I looked to the natural world to aid my healing process. The use of 6 healing modalities, which include diet, complementary, alternative, and integrative approaches to health offered me a second chance at life. In addition to the many surgeries on my arms and hands, I looked to the natural world for alternative remedies in relieving pain. Utilizing natural properties found in the plant and fungi kingdoms, such as turning to a more conscious diet, utilizing teas such as reishi and turkey tail mushrooms, and shifting to a more responsible worldview provided a radical recovery in health and wellbeing. The experience offered me the opportunity to ask how can I be more fully alive, and how can I show gratitude for the offerings of the plant and fungi kingdoms who have aided my recovery? In a recent discussion hosted online by Orion Magazine and Yale School of Forestry: "The Language of Trees: A Conversation with Kathleen Dean Moore and Alison Hawthorne Deming,” I learned all creations share the urge to live. They hold an urgency to protect the plants, animals, and environment which continue to provide us with its generous offerings. Understanding that we are all a part of something much larger than human life is how I find reverence for the natural world at the centerpiece of each work I now create. |

2021
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Alison Neville, Utah
Biophilium Teacher's Assistant
Fungi, maps, and political events permeate most of my work. I find them to be bizarre and otherworldly. This being said I cannot understand enough about them. I wonder how they can be combined, what can be learned from them? Are there ways to bring out those things that intrigue me? I examine world events and try to dissect them into understandable pieces. I try to play the scientist. The small and common button mushroom, available at every super-market, becomes the map for a nebula only seen through the eye of the Hubble Space telescope. I use maps to interpret political fragments into the cross-stitches that I can carry with me. Adding little indications of this research to make roads and public buildings. Cordyceps spring up in new varieties that choose kitsch statuettes as their hosts. |

Francine Dulong, Halifax, Nova Scotia
I am a physical theatre artist and vocal improviser with a burgeoning practice in sound and music composition. My participatory theatre company, Blooming Ludus, explores humanity’s connection to the planet. I am also a member of THAT! ensemble, a London UK based improv group that uses dance, theatre and movement to compose live vocal music. |

Kimberly Forero-Arnías, Hyde Park, MA
Working primarily with 16mm film and non-diegetic sound, my artistic practice explores the tensions and contradictions found in the intimate relationships we form. From sexuality and touch to familial bonds and interpersonal dynamics, I seek to express my own shifting states between frames and allow for irreconcilable feelings to speak simultaneously.
My current work aims to connect me to land where my mother was born through deep ecological listening. The experiential knowledge of interspecies dynamics gathered from growing up on a coffee farm in Colombia was left behind with my family’s migration to the United States. Results from my current research have so far manifested in sculptural sound objects, animations and drawings that reflect on orchid deception, hummingbirds, and non-human experience of time to explore and puncture the illusion of a reigning, singular, human perception of the world. |

Amanda Besl, Buffalo, NY
I am interested in the arbitrary curation of gardening and the warfare that ensues from these choices. Frothing bubbles fade to reveal porcelain rose petals macerated and mangled by the bejeweled and ethereal bobbing corpses of drowning Japanese beetles. They tread water in the murky deathtrap of a liquid measuring cup, suggested by the round panel of the oil painting that straddles simultaneous attraction and repulsion, hyperrealism and abstraction. This duality causes both rational and irrational distinctions and subconscious prejudices to bob to the surface of our awareness. Beautiful and repulsive they exist together for a liminal time, a slow read that can’t be unread.
My process began while tending my own garden and escorting these beautiful marauders to their soapy tomb. This work is a departure from early work exploring botanical debris visible through the translucent ‘skin’ of plastic yard waste bags. I liken these paintings to America’s current turbulent political climate, in which distinctions become lost in confusion and distortion. |

Kate Houlne, Indiana
Avian life has stood the test of time. A set of creatures evolved from the time of the dinosaurs. Yet, birds are in a cataclysmic decline around the world. Deforestation, chemical use, a changing climate and human made structures all take a toll on the bird population. These winged creatures do so much for the environment, from insect control, replanting of forests and pollination of plant life to providing recreation and spiritual guidance. They are not a menace to humans, yet how we live definitely is a menace to them.
The separation of man from nature began long ago and the split continues today. This work aims to visualize the invisible threads that connect how humans affect the land and consequently the birds, whose loss, as an indicator species, is not only a loss of bird song, but the loss of human life as well.
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Pam Lostracco, Toronto
Pam Lostracco is a muralist and graphic designer in Toronto. Her work forms connections with the local environment to create a sense of identity and belonging for those who live and work there. By integrating unique and diverse natural, cultural and historical influences, she transforms blank walls into inclusive and welcoming spaces. Pam designs each mural with visual aesthetics
that are familiar to the community. It invites people to engage with and explore the mural, creating an uplifting and meaningful experience.
On the side, Pam experiments with making paint from natural pigments found in nature. After drawing a plant, the petals, leaves or fruit are collected from that plant, then ground up into a pulpy watercolour. The pigment is used to paint in the areas of the plant the pigment came from.
Pam is the originator of the Mountain Mural, which was featured on Apartment Therapy and Pinterest, which has inspired others to recreate it around the world. Her murals can be found in and around Toronto, British Columbia, and Marrakesh, in residences, businesses and institutions. |
Natasha Lavdovsky, Jordan River, BC
Grounded in environmental research, my art practice untangles hidden connections between humans and natural systems. I am interested in the boundary between acts of care and acts of harm within human/nature relationships. My artistic interrogations operate between “collaboration with” and “manipulation of” non-human beings. With the intention of minimizing my involvement in capitalist systems my methodology embraces the limitations of environmental temporality, seasonality, and the agency of organic entities. Using mostly scavenged natural materials or found objects, my work brings what are usually disparate elements of the same system into unity. Through this union, I aim to highlight our interconnections to the ecologies that support domestic life in order to subvert the human/nature dualism that is at the basis of Western colonial culture. These artistic inquiries take the form of video, performance, textiles, sculpture, and installation projects. Currently, I am incorporating ecological principles or scientific archives into collaborative projects that work to critique the ways we understand and value lichens, a composite organism that is often overlooked and misunderstood. |

Christine Atkinson, Los Angeles
We know that our institutions have failed us, that what we thought of as a reliable model, is not working and has not worked for many of us for a long time. The understanding of the landscape, of where nature resides and our place in it, is a flawed construct. The prevailing aesthetic of Los Angeles of palm trees, tropical and imported ornamental plants has little to do with the hundreds of plants that create the native ecosystem. We’ve created an urban environment that is totally dependent on imported water and human intervention, which neither connects us to Los Angeles as a place or supports the failing ecosystem.
Moving between sculpture, installation and photography, I use the materials of Los Angeles to piece together a sense of the city, both pre european occupation and manufactured. “for you and those you love” focuses on the gardens, both public and private, that are devoted to supporting the native ecosystem with the hope to prevent the collapse of the ecosystem.
In my works, dead giant bird of paradise leaves are painted in green epoxy to masquerade, as verdant, and ideal. While in contrast, the dead looking branches of the encelia californica sit dormant or burn red in the light filtered through wildfire smoke. Wildfire debris encased in epoxy and salt, acts as a time capsule of the drought, increasing temperatures and the misuse of water. Ultimately asking how do we inhabit, recalibrate, and affect our home landscape of Los Angeles, and what will be the impact of our actions? Are we here for ourselves alone? |

Tiffany Deater, Fulton, NY
We live in a culture that thrives on drama and conflict; a barrier between the imagined and the real. This desire for social tension extends beyond the human, and we impose our ideologies onto the animals and environment around us.
We overlook quiet spaces and moments of stillness, forgetting what it means to simply exists as living beings.
My work is about reimagining our relationship with animals, the environment, and each other. Though my video works I seek to connect the viewer with other forms of life, sometimes journeying though their perspective seeking to answer the questions: how do we connect and empathize with other animals? What insight can we gain from their world? |

Jennifer Arave, Minneapolis, MN
I am discovering that the primary emphasis of my dance/movement career over the past 10-15 years has been grounded in the ability/disability to interface and build connections with others. I have zeroed in on systems and sometimes entities that connect/disconnect and even mislead to create disconnections through confusion -- be it political, or philosophical or interpersonal in nature. Many man-made systems that are meant to connect have ultimately confused, obfuscated and blown-up rather than the well-intended connection as purported. This translate ironically, into a perception of isolation, from others and within the individual. Among the systems, technology has often been the object of disdain and the brunt of the critical humor in my work.
I work in dance because of its ability to be a substantial connector including dancers, somatic practitioners, and other living beings; wordless movement that bridges gaps, brings clarity and a sense of completion as verbal language is removed. A somatic practice can detangle snags and confusions and a dependency on a verbal language system. This is also true for the movement education modalities I have chosen to invest my time in. Open Source Forms and Body-Mind Centering have opened deep channels into inter-body communication; wordless pathways that become a bridge not only in human to human interaction, but also perhaps connections in shared consciousnesses, human or other-wise. |

Meg Nicks, Alberta
As a visual artist, the intricate details of nature are captivating. Natureʼs flow and rhythms and the interconnectivity of its patterns and design are subjects for art. The mountain environment is my major focus, an apparently solid, but infinitely changeable environment, where life, tough yet fragile, prospers in a severe world. We must look closely to appreciate all that is here. Flowers, mosses, lichen. The black patterns on aspen trees. Salamanders and seeds. Even the rusting of artifacts left behind.
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2020 |

Michael Pissano, Pittsburgh, PA
Expedition leader
Michael Pisano is an animator, illustrator, and filmmaker. His first career aspiration was to be a dinosaur. Later acquisition of bifocals in suburban New Jersey led to an amateur interest in small things: ants, pondscum particles, fine print, and the Earth as featured in illustrations of the solar system.
Michael uses storytelling, from documentary to illustration series to transmedia hybrids, to educate about nature and the importance of stewardship in the Anthropocene. His nonfiction work highlights the intricacy and intertwined beauty of all living things, and the researchers and activists working to understand and protect them. His fiction work uses the treatment of nature in myth and fantasy as a point of entry into environmental justice conversations.
Since reading E.O. Wilson’s Naturalist at age 11, ants remain his favorite animal. He admires the qualities they represent: collaboration, selflessness, curiosity. Ants also remind Michael of relative scale, that humans are cells on a gently revolving giant. The giant clambers a circle around an infinite cosmos. That cosmos repeats infinitely. Simultaneously, we are each a subatomic cosmos, infinite electrons arrayed into monkey shapes wearing infinite plant fiber atoms using a variety of small boxes inside of bigger boxes, all experienced inside a fractalized matroyshka series of perceived cultural boxes. Thanks, ants.
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Dawn George, Hammonds Plains,
Nova Scotia
I work with film and video because movement and sound fascinate me. I’m interested in recording natural objects that have very minimal movements like a seed, a plant, an insect, or mold and then reveal how they communicate through subtle often time-lapsed movements. I develop ways to enhance the visuals through subtle animation, colour changes, and sound design. The films I create are rooted in environmentalism with subtle elements of science fiction.
When working with film I prefer to use eco-processing developers made from the plants I am filming to bring a multifaceted quality to the image. When I work digitally, I use editing techniques, masking, compositing, time-lapse photography, and computer animation to create subtle changes in the moving images. Audio design plays a large role in my practice. I prefer to source sounds found in nature or create my own sounds (usually from my kitchen) and then use audio editing programs to adjust a sound’s features to compliment the video.
Nature provides me with a sense of inspiration and peace, and I am always seeking ways to work with it and in it. I believe that nature holds universal truths and through careful observation, it speaks to us. Through these observations, I look for the connections that help me understand life on this planet and incorporate this into my work. |

Amanda McKenzie, Edmonton, AB
Enticement , explores creating fabrications of fish, insects, birds, lures, and bait imagery. I photograph and scan in imagery of fish, invertebrates, feathers, and real tackle to create new amalgamations of what could be perceived and are initially considered as an ordinary fishing lure or aquatic creature. I meticulously collage these images and objects together and screenprint numerous altered colour layers that result in shimmering and iridescent creations of uncanny decoys. With this series I am inventing colourful fusions of creatures and the bait that attracts and captures them, thus creating a juxtaposition between the natural and artificial.
The work focuses on falsities in perception. I enjoy creating work that appears to be one way, but on closer inspection the viewer can investigate and discover the true nature of the image. I am interested in how the viewer engages with my work, by what attracts them and also to what is successfully deceptive.
I am exploring the artform, history, and obsession of fishing and fly tying, as well as concepts of object fixation/fetishization, and the habits of incessant collecting. I examine my own femininity in a male dominated area, and am constantly questioning and determining my stance within the culture of sport fishing and the aquarist’s role in fish keeping. I am creating this work through the lens of nostalgia which assists to reconnect me to my late father and to my initial connection to fishing. With my body of work I am enthusiastically researching deeper into the areas of ichthyology, entomology, and ornithology as I choose, collect, transform, and reimagine my creations. |

Bohie Palecek, Braidwood, NSW Australia
Bohie Palecek is inspired by nature at a micro-level and uses the natural world as a metaphor for her personal experiences. Her narrative-driven artworks are inherently innocent, as if seen through the eyes of an empathetic child with a curious nature. They toy with a dichotomy between the safety of home and the wildness beyond; the known and the unknown. As her femininity breaks free of domestication her courage takes her into the motherly arms of the natural world, welcoming her back to the strength and support of her female ancestors. Opposing this connection is an inherently threatening force with malicious intent, the product of a child brought up with off-the-grid parents who retreated from the intrinsically man made threats of Y2K, identity theft, world wars and food shortages. This lack of security creates the yang to the curious child’s yin, often resulting in shadowy themes being presented in misleadingly bright and cheerful colours.
Somewhere in the artificial constructs of what it means to be a woman in today’s climate, Bohie sifts through contemporary mythology for a sense of her own identity. |

Mary Abma, Bright’s Grove, ON
My work is rooted in the land. For years, my practice has led me to combine my artistic expression with knowledge gained through scientific exploration. Botany has been at the forefront of my artistic practice for a decade, now. I work on comprehensive projects that explore the interconnections between our natural environment and our lives. Through my works, I have learned the basics of botany, developed a passion for plants—especially trees, and have become dedicated to creating series of artworks that explore the impact of our actions and inattention which contributes to the destruction of our forest ecosystems.
I recently completed a four-year project through which I mourned the loss of our native ash trees due to the emerald ash borer. I am currently looking for inspiration for my next major project. My works always involve research and collaboration with scientists and other professionals whose insights give deeper meaning to my work. The “Germinate” residency is exactly what I need right now. Exploring the natural environment in Gatineau, and opportunities to speak with other professionals about the botany of the area will certainly influence the direction that my work will take over the next several years. |

Rachel Kavathe, Columbus, IN
My work focuses on our connections to the natural environment and sense of place. In addition to my work as an artist, I also am a landscape architect and urban designer. In all three professions, there is a central question that drives my work. I am seeking to understand how our communities can better connect to the natural world and better integrate biodiversity into our built environments.
Through my academic work, I explore our cultural understanding of the meaning of nature and how this definition must evolve along with our changing environment. As an urban designer and city planner, I work to better integrate natural systems into built environments and connect people to their natural environment.
As an artist, I seek to find ways to express the importance of this subject matter through form, color and material. My sculptural work is predominantly stone carving, with a mix of media to represent the tensions between natural and human made materials. My sculptures incorporate limestone, marble, alabaster, copper, brass, 3D printed materials, acrylic, resin, and natural found objects. In my paintings, I explore the forms and colors of my surrounding landscapes as a means to better understand the true essence of these environments. |
Doris Lamontagne, Ottawa, Canada
My art reflects on the interactions between beings in adjacent environments. It highlights the contrasts and similarities between beings and exposes the dynamism that emerges from these relationships. Whether ecological, geographical or cultural, my art makes an attempt to illustrate the dynamic nature of these worlds: attraction versus opposition.
In this series of five prints, I explore “panpsychism” which entails that all things have a mind or a mind-like quality. All things share these mental qualities: feeling, inner life, subjectivity, and perception. All things experience pleasure, pain, visual or auditory sensations, etc.
In my research, I investigate the possibility that one destiny of a being affects the destiny of all beings. Call it ecology, Gaia or holistic, everything is connected: the equilibrium between the forces of attraction and opposition keeps us breathing. |

Sophy Tuttle, Lowell, MA
My artwork is focused on the natural world, our place in it, and the conflicts and collaborations we find ourselves in everyday with nature. My bright, carefully researched murals and paintings often aim to disrupt deeply embedded beliefs about the hierarchy of nature. I lovingly render birds, animals,
My artwork is focused on the natural world, our place in it, and the conflicts and collaborations we find ourselves in everyday with nature. My bright, carefully researched murals and paintings often aim to disrupt deeply embedded beliefs about the hierarchy of nature. I lovingly render birds, animals, and plants to evoke a sense of awe and reverence for these beings. Although extinction and loss loom in the man-made Anthropocene era, I hope that my paintings call attention to the magnificent beauty that still exists in nature today. I believe the best artwork catalyzes new ways of thinking about the world we live in. I count myself among the growing cohort of artists who are exploring the themes of the Anthropocene in a curious and humane way.
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Amanda Thackray, Newark, NJ
Amanda Thackray Artist Statement Through my studio practice I investigate fibers, tissues, and other particles with prefixes of micro. I create quasi-fictional biological landscapes of the microscopic in shifting scales. From small cast-glass monuments to installations that envelope entire walls, my work seeks to create kinship with the minute by raising questions about the materiality of our being.
This work is primarily concerned with the microscopic unknown of the human body, but has recently expanded to include a parallel body of work focusing on microplastics. In 2017, I started a project concerned with the Great Pacific Garbage Patch during a residency in Eastport Maine, a small town on the Northeastern border of the US. This work in progress, titled 1,000 Square Feet (0.00701459%) Project. I have continued this project by visiting global sites, and to date have created 400 prints, each twelve inches square, with an end goal of 1,000 prints. Each print is created on handmade paper using site-specific water - literally embedding traces of the environment, both natural and man-made, into the artwork. These prints attempt to simulate a fictional segment of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch - one that is created from plastic waste that is rescued from the shoreline of each site that I visit. |

Claire Fleming Staples, Oakland CA
Plants are an intrinsic element of my painting practice, and my life. As I have become more knowledgeable about wild plants, how to harvest and make medicines from them, the plants in my paintings have become more specific and realized. My house plants have become more diverse and abundant. As my life has been troubled by the rancor of late capitalist urbanity, the tragic death of loved ones, my art practice has become about healing; painting an ameliorating garden of lush colors, leaves, flowers, vines and growing an Arcadian vision for the viewer to step into. In my somatic Reiki therapy practice, l receive visions of plant allies that I incorporate into my work, along with other symbols and metaphysical tools. Working in this way I am grateful for the newly discovered artistic ancestry of Hilma Af Klint, the Pennsylvania Dutch and Shaker artists I grew up with, as well as Medieval Christian paintings whose plant lore point to a pagan magical herbalism lying just beneath the surface. I am at home in the natural world, and I am always seeking to sow it back into the city.
I am eager for the opportunity to be able to delve deeper in my relationship with growing/harvesting/preparing and observing/rendering plants by adding the lenses of botany and biology to my practice. I think it is the key in tying together the Balsam Root in my painting Sunspell, that first captured my fascination in Lassen, and that now hangs drying in my pantry, harvested from my friend’s farm in Mendocino.
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2019
Field Expeditions |
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Margaret Haydon, Wyoming
Using primarily ceramic processes, I work with image elements from the natural world, focusing on aspects of current environmental change and the resulting impact on habitat and species populations. I have worked specifically with sturgeon imagery for the past nine years, depicting the animal in contexts that reference their habitat, history and endangered status. Through this specific investigation, I have grown increasingly interested in the broader environmental predicament. While currently the endangered sturgeon species is a central image in my work, other species are beginning to appear. Each day brings a new article highlighting the degradation of various species from sturgeon and shark, to bee, brown bat and golden frog. We live in the company of animals, often unaware of our effect on their populations. I am fascinated by the incredible rate at which species arise and disappear. We are all witnesses now of great, swift changes taking place in our natural world. With this work I hope to spark a broader thoughtfulness about the impact we are having on our physical environment.
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my mother has lost her ability to see only one moon
four ways of looking and more when she takes her glasses off
another and another wrapping around each other dimming with each iteration |
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Samantha (Sammy) Moore, Berthoud, CO
My poetry examines the human condition, and particularly the relationships between the waking human world, and the nocturnal world of the night. An obsessive love of bats quickly became the inspiration to explore night and how people and animals relate to it. Throughout the process of writing the Critical Thesis for my MFA, I developed several experimental embodiment practices, in order to immerse myself in the world of the bats, including inverted writing, night writing experiments, and nocturnal writing practice, wherein all composition took place at night, often outdoors. I am currently continuing work on a poetic manuscript, tentatively titled Nightscapes; this extended landscape poem explores the interplay of humans and what I like to call nightness by presenting various scenes of night that incorporate both the natural and the human world. Not only is the project intended to be a piece of eco-poetry that delves into human relationships with night, it also incorporates themes of Disability Poetics, including sleep disorders and chronic illness. I think the Nocturne residency is the perfect fit for me to further explore the night, its glorious inhabitants, and to utilize scientific resources that may aid the development and creative expansion of my current work. |
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Katie St Clair
Foraging for mushrooms has become a meditative practice for me. It is my way of engaging the senses, of absorbing the rush of rich and subtle colors, forms, scents, textures, and tastes that surround me in the woods. My paintings are a reflection of immersion in those environments, an attempt to articulate them in another language, to visualize that which cannot be seen, or described in words. Abstraction of these forms allows me to communicate the complex subtlety of non-linear ecosystems, and the transformative power of encountering them, in all their strangeness, wonder, and awe. When brought to the studio, experimental technique transforms collected fungal forms into unconventional paint texture, while fungal dyes and plant extractions add new elements to my repertoire of art materials. The hunt for colors and new elements found growing--or dying—in the soil keeps pulling me back to the rugged forest terrain.
My solo exhibition “Fruiting Bodies” was featured on Creative Loafing- Charlotte. (https://clclt.com/charlotte/katie-st-clairs-ice-spheres-feature-beauty-decay-and-mushrooms/Content?oid=10731104). I have extensive experience with cross-disciplinary collaborations with scientists, sociologists and naturalists. I recently completed a $50,000 mural commission for Northern Kentucky University’s Health and Innovation Center. The mural focuses on cycles of healing in the native ecosystem.
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Melanie Fisher, Buffalo, NY
My sculptures are organic and otherworldly. With influences from nature and sci-fi, I build large forms that are new hybrids of species, with mixed characteristics from the plant and animal kingdom. By working in a range of scales and mediums, I explore the connections between our micro and macro worlds, imagining the opportunity to discover something previously unknown.
The details in my work focus on the relationship between interior and exterior space, drawing the viewer in for closer inspection. By leaving small anomalies in each piece, I invite the viewer to explore and discover something they’ve never seen. I am currently focusing on round, bulbous forms to reflect fertility, sometimes filling an interior space with hundreds of seeds. My interest in seeds correlates with a current project that will be installed in the Buffalo and Erie Botanical Gardens in Buffalo, New York, during the summer of 2019. |
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Dani Dale, Saskatoon, SK
In Dani Dale’s multi-media works she explores the themes of identity, femininity, loss, and the limitations and consequences of established gender roles. She draws upon personal experience and the death of her mother as well as current issues such as climate change, environmental degradation, and food accessibility.
In opposition to the limits that gender roles place on women, Dale’s body of work strives to be free of such limitations. She works with several mediums and her practice includes but is not limited to sculpture, photography, video, and installation.
In her sculptural work, Dale uses metal and plant life as her primary materials. The tension between the organic and untamed aspects of nature and manufactured structure is the inspiration for her work. Dale addresses this tension on a personal level questioning the constructed form of femininity that is imposed on us as we grow up and the consequences of those impositions. This tension reaches far beyond the personal realm, it can be seen on a global level as we face the reality of the consequences of global degradation and climate change.
Dale’s photography uses barren landscapes printed in cyanotype to address both the barren inner landscape that the imposition of a constructed femininity creates as well as a warning of what is to come on a large scale if we choose to continue seeing ourselves as separate and superior to the earth.
Dale’s exploration of limitation and separation isn’t limited to gender roles. In the final years of her BFA at the University of Saskatchewan, she was the student leader of Usask STEAM; a collaboration among artists and engineers. Usask STEAM created several collaborative works including an installation for Saskatoon’s Nuit Blanche 2016. Inspired by Olafur Eliasson’s multi-disciplinary practice and belief that art is the starting point for social change, collaboration has become an important motivation in her work. She has worked with people from a variety of different disciplines including engineering, drama, and microbiology. |
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Markus Haala, Lowell, MA
What is nature and what is natural? These questions become progressively harder to answer as the impact of human intervention into the ecosphere expands. The same questions inform my interdisciplinary and research- based studio practice, which is committed to explore and survey environmental and ecological systems.
Informed by object-oriented ontology and motivated by critically reviewing naturalistic positions, my work discusses new definitions of nature originating from the Anthropocene, the term for the geological age in which human intervention into the ecosphere has become the foremost influence on climate and environment.
Topics of how we outline, perceive and shape concepts of the natural and the artificial, the organic and the synthetic, are central aspects that inform my work. I investigate these themes from a viewpoint located at the intersection of post-structuralist theory and the philosophical foundation of contemporary environmental studies. I review existing models of nature, environmentalism and ecology that are generally based on
commonly accepted, representational structures of nature in western history, established by institutions such as museums of natural history. My research results are translated into project-based, conceptual installations that explore the collapsing nature-culture distinction through an examination of materials, images, and sculptural objects. My work engages in both institutional critique as well as the interrogation of our role in shaping the world through augmented technologies. Crossing from sculpture and print media into multifaceted arrangements of assemblages and educational displays, I often work with industrial resources that are part of the ongoing modification of the natural world, including light, (ply)wood, electronics, cast plastics, or metals. All of these components are frequently in dialog with organic matter to underline the dichotomy of object and subject, from a semiotic perspective, when it comes to the question of what nature apparently is, what it is not, and how our understanding often collides with it. |
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Biophilia, Fall 2015 |
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Lucie Strecker, Germany
My work focuses on the relationship between ecology and performance, which has influenced theories of action/reaction, audience/player, somatic techniques, improvisation or other systems of training and collaboration. I query concepts of ecology and Umwelt and how they have changed since biotechnology reproduces or synthetic biology has engineered life, and placed it in the ambiguous realm of being created both naturally and technologically. I consider the theoretical understanding of biological materiality as well as the tangible creation of experimental settings, in which the used media change meaning and latent narrative structures become perceivable, as crucial for the development of my performance practices. Along the relation between apparatuses, humans and non-humans, I develop texts, choreographies and scenographies that deal with the ontological changes, new normative assumptions and ethical concerns, that life itself faces under the influence of technological biodesign and new orders in ecological systems.
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Karolina Żyniewicz, Poland
The core of my interest is the balance between nature and culture, as represented through visual arts. Nature provides me with a setting or environment to examine area aesthetics. Having abandoned the making of representational work, I developed my preference for objects and installations that require interaction. Art, to my mind, should be an investigation similar to science. The most important aspect is the process. The piece of art or exhibition exists for some time and then disappears, as do all living things. It is about asking questions, researching and seeking adventure. A major factor in my work is curiosity. I am interested in all aspects of the natural world and while I can't know or learn everything, art allows me to use every area of knowledge without specialisation. It is a place for making relationships between different layers of thinking. I value and appreciate cooperation with people, the transfer of knowledge and sharing experiences. This was the motivation of my recent collaborations with Departments of Education in both the Museum of Modern Art and National Gallery Zachęta in Warsaw.
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Maria Dmitruk, Poland
I am a multimedia artist, whose projects focus on involving audience – I’m very interested in all kinds of interactive projects. My means of expression on one hand include installations open to a dialogue with space and on the other hand, objects – sometimes small – which focus on details, structures and textures showing the unity in diversity among organic forms. Natural sciences have always been a great passion of mine. As I progress along my artistic path, I become more and more aware of the importance of ecological issues. I try to avoid synthetic materials – it is a gesture of respect for the Earth and its produce. Besides, I think no other substance is as noble, as the one coming directly from the nature itself.
I have developed a number of projects using soil; recently I turned to bio-art in its more precise meaning. At the moment, I’m working on my PhD project, which concerns plant physiology; specifically speaking – the phenomenon of etiolation. The darkness, I’m dealing with, is a natural condition, permanently present in most of the Universe. Darkness on our privileged planet, which is natural, seems to be conceptualised as an instance of absence – an absence of light, which influences vegetation in nature and influences human mind. Darkness represents both existential anxiety and concern about the future of natural environment.
Projects, which I develop, require a lot of meticulous work and of an interdisciplinary co-operation with scientists and technology experts – it’s not the number of projects that matters to me, but their meaningfulness. This style of work makes me concentrate on the process of creation and I find it important to share it with others. I believe that an intellectual community of like-minded people, who are at the same time individuals coming from different backgrounds can benefit with a significant and universal change.
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Adrian E. Rivera, NYC
Technology exists only in the presence of living beings. In the same way those beings are formed by nature around them. My work is derived from a source object or concept, the structures grow and deform in response to it’s surroundings. As new structures are formed pre-existing ones may shift and bend in the wake of new matter. As I imitate aspects of the natural world I wish to provide organisms the ability to take forms not seen before by removing control and allowing living matter to grow onto the structures I have created. In doing so the remains of previous beings are consumed and integrated in a new whole.
My work is often dependent on a self imposed limit of time; this creates a sense of urgency which allows me to create intuitively. This fluid workflow translates to the final piece. My materials include things such as 3D printed plastic, animal bones, mycelium, moss and other plants.
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Biophilia, Summer 2015
Wolfvillw, Nova Scotia
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Anika Schneider, USA
Our society has a poor history with environmental stewardship. One of the cultural ideas we need to wrestle with in today’s environmental crisis is whether we are a part of nature or apart from nature. As the media plays such a significant role in our society in shaping our ideas and opinions, I scoured news stories to better understand how the media presents the natural world. In these news stories, I discovered themes of struggle between humans and the environments in which we live. From stories of combatting floods, forest fires, tides, etc., humans were presented as not living with nature but rather battling it and attempting to keep natural forces at bay. In my paintings, I pair contrasting painting techniques of thin drippy glazes and thick brush strokes to depict this tension between man and nature. My paintings have an aura of mystery, which is created through unclear subject matter and a layering of paint to capture how unsettled and vulnerable humans feel when constantly battling their environment, instead of living with it. As I worked with news stories, I began to place landscapes from my life and my own self into the paintings to question my own place in the natural world.
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Michael Barraco, NYC
Immaculate Dissection
I am a Brooklyn based artist interested in exploring the blunt physical reality of existence through the use of organic materials. Spider webs, insects, found road kill, and vernacular photography all have a place in the construction of my work. By combining these elements and changing their context I create objects that elicit an immediate, visceral confrontation with the material, while at the same time also creating a clinical distance from the subject matter. The effect is one of anesthetized physicality, and it allows me to materialize the intangible while also making very clear distinctions between reality and illusion.
Drawing upon my accrued secular perspective and the mundane violence of the everyday, I aim to engage in a dialogue that reflects the conflicts, emotions, and failures that arise in daily experience. My focus on the physical presence of objects and their ephemerally arises from the contemplation of my current perspective, which contrasts strongly with the intangibility of the spiritual universe of my Catholic adolescence. I believe by more fully immersing myself in the environment of my subject matter I will emerge with a greater understanding of my practice.
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Marjorie Lemay, Montreal
In the last 15 years, through drawing, painting, etching and photography, and in a desire to capture its essence, I developed a hybrid visual language that enables me to project myself into the Animal and unveil my singular imagination. As an artist, I continuously strive to renew my creativity and explore new ways to harness matter and refine my graphic language. My work tends to adopt a narrative shape and experimental film (especially animation) appears to me as a way to orchestrate my visual language with a new sound dimension. My work has been presented in thirty events and group exhibits, particularly at the 2005 Junction Arts Festival in Toronto, the Joyce Yahouda Gallery in 2004 and at the 2004 Photomahon (Montréal/Guadalajara edition). My last exhibition, Ursus Maritimus,was presented at Maison de la culture Frontenac de Montréal in February 2008.
My animation films Les Nocturnes and Auscultation of the Heart produced at Mel hoppenheim School of Cinema in 2010-2012 received significant recognition and acclaim in many important national and international film festivals.
Since 2012, I am a new mom and I have the chance to experience working as an educator and a teacher assistant in different contexts and schools with adults, teens and children. I feel that it nourishes my art practice a lot and help me understand more about collaborative works. I am also currently collaborating with a theater group (Le Théâtre du Cerisier) creating animated sequences for a puppets show that will be shown to teenagers in 2015-16.
As an MFA student in Film Production since September 2014, I am exploring different cinematic approaches to celebrate nonhuman life forms, Sanctuaries and wildlife preservation. In a continual quest for finding ways to engage the spectator in a dialogue with Nature, I am really excited to participate to residencies like yours that celebrate Art and Science and Nature. I have just finish writing a paper about Nature and Sound Art and I would like to experiment more in that field.
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William Scully, USA
Nature is the inspiration for my photographic work and I enjoy seeking out and probing into overlooked microcosms within the natural world. With an approach to art that is both exploratory and methodical, I look for gesture in nature by wandering natural realms with my camera and sampling the many variations in light and atmosphere that change with time and season and weather. The sensual quality of my artwork reflects the physicality connecting me to the environment as I photograph. Engaging nature in this way, I explore the landscape and embed the experience in my art.
My educational background in engineering and actuarial science has given me a studious approach to art, and the results of my photography often lead me to more in-depth research on my subjects. Recently I have been studying lithographic printing techniques for reproducing my work. Full of many variables, lithography involves a complex craftsmanship that I find appealing to both the artistic and the analytical aspects of my personality. This intertwining of exploration and learning through art is what I find most compelling about being an artist.
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John Deamond, USA
My work explores the border of the human and the natural through processes often on the borders of photography. Osage Orange (Maclura pomifera) builds a process that captures the spirit of a place through its leavings: those parts cast on the ground to decompose or grow into new plants. These two types of leavings are the summation of the natural processes of a place; the beginning and end of life cycles occur side by side and feed one another, entropic and organizing processes work together to build a biological community. Like all of my recent work, I consider these pieces to be environmental portraits: ways of telling nature’s personal story, whether it be of Nova Scotia, the Chesapeake Bay, or even contemporary attitudes toward extinction. A Field Guide to the Extinct and Extirpated Birds of North America takes on the latter. Through a book and collection, this work guides visitors through my investigations of extinct North American birds. It juxtaposes images and data from natural history institutions and eBay with traditional field guide pages to tell the continuing story of these birds; how, despite using them until they were gone, we continue to find new uses.
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Biophilia Spring 2015 |
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Marynes Avila, Australia
The Public Narratives of Multiples: A Language of Transcendence
Marynes Avila is an Argentinean born Melbourne artist who implements the use of multiples as “data connectors” by investigating the uniqueness of each unit and its interrelationship with the group. Involving overwhelming quantities of a single familiar object, generating collaboration and interaction, Avila explores the resonance of multiples by utilizing them as tools of public intervention.
Avila’s practice is multidisciplinary, her repertoire gravitating between labor intense site-specific installations, sculpture, meticulous drawing, digital photography and film.
From topics as varied as cells to mass production, the artist investigates the public narratives of multiples as a reflection of the personal and the universal, the profound and the abject, chaos and order. Redefining the object, its purpose and symbolism, Marynes Avila’s practice is informed by Science and Nature, particularly Biology and Neuroscience, Carl Jung's concept of the Collective Unconscious and Depth Psychology. Recently the artist has produced a new body of work that includes microscopic digital photography of organic material and familiar objects. The magnified images reveal a world of multiplicity invisible to the naked eye.
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Julya Hajnoczky, Calgary

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The extraordinary details of the natural world never fail to amaze me. The quiet work of plants, animals and insects, so easily ignored by humans, is what interests me the most, and what I constantly return to for inspiration. Much of my work is a sort of meditation on the interactions between people and nature, on the ways in which we attempt to control and codify nature, yet hold ourselves as somehow separate. My pieces attempt to frame the work of plants and animals in terms that are easier for humans to understand, and potentially empathize or identify with. I hope to inspire a sense of wonder or fascination, and encourage the viewer to consider the energy and resources that go into the constant cycle of building and decay in complex environments and ecosystems.
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Michelle Wilson, Canada
‘Becoming animal’ is a common idiom in contemporary discussions of human-animal and nonhuman-animal relationships, but are we not already, and always have been animal? I have come to understand the term as describing a state of attentiveness to our animality. In this state we become concatenated, recognizing the light of personhood in the eyes of another animal looking back, acknowledging that singularity is not synonymous with humanity.
The creatures I create are born out of living body-to-body, heart-to-heart, with my nonhuman companions, past and present. Our fleshy and vulnerable undersides exposed to one another, eyes asking, “Can you feel me?” I see a material; plasticine, clay, wax, soft downy roving and they combine with my thoughts and fears, the books I’ve read, and my dog Scooter’s gestures, his looks that tug on my insides. The outcome of my making is intuitive, but in no way mindless, and the affective power of these creatures remains beyond the grasp of my words, the means of my rational language. The deerhounds and fetuses I generate are both internal and external creatures, living and dead, of us and yet distressingly foreign. We want to pull them into us to comfort, but are uncertain of their diseased flesh. They are art objects and affective interlocutors appealing to us with their gaze.
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Julya Hajnoczky, Canada
Our relationship with the natural world is fraught. Humans are part of nature, but in many ways we behave as though we were somehow above it. It is this contradiction that I am interested in exploring in my work – the conflicted territory between my awe and wonder at the fascinating ecosystems that surround me, and our ultimately (self-)destructive human impulse to collect, codify, classify and control our environment.
An intimate connection to wilderness and nature has long been inextricably linked to popular definitions of Canadianness. My own experiences have been no exception, having spent much of my life enjoying the wilds. My work is informed by these experiences, and by popular Canadian cultural references. The tradition of Cabinets of Curiosities, those theatrical natural history installations, is another strong influence. In attempting to convey my fascination with even, or especially, the tiniest features of the natural world, I’ve adopted a multi-disciplinary practice. A camera-less version of historical photographic processes allows me to use pressed plants, feathers and other collected specimens in place of photographic negatives, my enlarger standing in for a microscope while the metal and glass photographic plates produced let me share the exquisite details of the barbs of a feather or the veins of a leaf. Meanwhile, drawing on my multicultural heritage (another oh-so Canadian identifier), I use Hungarian embroidery skills learned as a child to imagine strange and impossible, yet still beautiful, hybrid Canadian creatures. For me these creatures serve as a reminder of the interconnectedness of all beings in an ecosystem, but also evoke the danger of human over-involvement in directing the fate of the natural world, while playing on popular representations of Canadian culture, including ideas of multiculturalism. Finally, my intricate paper sculptures are another slow and meticulous mode of making that allows me to meditate on subject matter drawn from nature. The material link between the paper and the trees from which is it made is important, as is the scale of the work: natural resources are precious, and I strive to keep my footprint small. Creating tiny, delicate, fragile representations of the animals and plants that are important to me hopefully conveys my sense of the preciousness and value of the living world surrounding us.
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Nicole Edmond, Canada
“Number of microbes per square centimeter of human skin: upward of 100,000” Invisible Kingdom by Idan Ben-Barak
In my practice, I am fascinated with the world of microbial life which is invisible to the naked eye. This curiosity with the invisible is similar to the scientists and artists exploring how things worked in the 1500’s, with theatre painting and drawings of the dead. They too used observations to draw images of anatomies and these drawings to this day are used in human anatomy to education on things that can’t always be seen to the naked eye. My prints work in a similar fashion to these theatre paintings. The viewers are peering into the small world of microbial life, something that is a mystery to most people. In this way this imagery is a reflection of my own curiosity with microbial life and the pursuit of knowledge. According to quote above by Idan Ben-Barak, 100,000 microbes and more are on our skin, this number is exactly why I am so fascinated with cellular life. The fact that there are more than 100,000 microbes on a square centimeter of human skin without anyone entirely being conscious about it is both terrifying and exhilarating.
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Carol Howard Donati, Canada
A part of me, otherwise unspoken, becomes articulate while creating with my hands. I draw from inner expression, my background as an anthropologist, my appreciation of traditions of women’s work and design ideas taken from everyday life. Referencing the familiar and the virtual hiddenness of things we take for granted is the starting point for my examination of broader issues of human concern such as questions of personhood, health and wellbeing, environmental sustainability, and global food security. I am drawn to natural fabrics, typically working with cotton, linen or silk, enhancing these with various layers of texture using dyes, paint, appliqué and stitch.
I frequently incorporate found objects and domestic materials in my work, juxtaposing ubiquitous household disposables with natural forms and colours as a way to provoke awareness. As an artist, my virtual sketchbook is nature photography. I live near the Petrie Island Wetlands and find taking photos there a meditative way to access creative thinking. I am always eager to expand my knowledge and experience of the natural world as a way to open to my senses and connect with inspiration. |
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Natasha Avila, Australia
My work explores the characteristics of the reflected image within the context of the wearable object. Utilizing reflective surfaces, the aim of the work is to produce spatial rediscoveries by deconstructing, transforming and emphasizing details. The work morphs depending on its surroundings and the wearer’s contact with it. The amalgamation of shiny, reflective mirror surfaces and the impermanent nature of the reflected surrounding environment transmit ever-changing visual statements. Characterized by the elegant simplicity of geometric forms, vertical and horizontal planes and interior and exterior spaces, my work articulates a sense of order and balance. Under close inspection, each piece provides an interstitial space where reflection becomes a reversal of the observer and the object - a vehicle for the projection of the self. In addition, my work currently explores textures in the surrounding environment. |
Biophilia Fall 2014
Field expeditions
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Regan Rosburg, USA
Detail of The Nursery paint,resin, natural materials
I aspire to re-establish intimacy with our inherent connection to the wildness of nature, while tapping into the frightening reality of a deteriorating, overly strained world. I seek to poignantly illustrate the injurious consequences ecological decline, but I do this by deeply rooting my artistic sensibility in an ecosystem’s ability to dominate any obstacle, to equalize what is not in balance. My artwork is soaked in reverence, awe, and threat. Thus, I ride a razor’s edge of harsh environmental concerns and spiritual musings, both of which are deeply based in my scientific and ecological research.
My materials of resin, detritus, organic remnants, plastic, sugar, gelatin, paint, and time-lapse photography address this subject through a lens of permanence/impermanence. Most notably, I have developed a unique, complicated process of creating three-dimensional “sculptural paintings” out of objects, painted images, and resin. One can see into each piece as if peering into a deep pool of water. Each piece can take a month to complete.
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Darya Warner, USA
Portrait of Escherichia Coli, 18” by 24"
My work revolves around the complexity of nature and global environmental consciousness. Through bio-processing and collaboration with living organisms (mycelium, bioluminescent algae, glowing E.Coli and other living matter) combined with usage of modern technologies (CNC machines) I create interactive installations, visual displays, and sculptures to engage the viewer into becoming more aware of the world around us and push to rethink their place as a ‘sapiens’ part of Earth’s complex.
My previous works include “Tribute to Edison “ - an interactive installation consisting of suspended lightbulbs filled with bioluminescent algae (founded in warm coastal waters) attached to the enlarged laser cutouts of the microscopic images of the algae as a single cell. The viewer is encouraged to touch the bulbs so the algae will react by producing the glow. The idea of biological control and substituting non-living material with living organisms (ex. coal production for generation electricity) is replayed in this artwork.
One of my latest works is “ The Shape of Things to Come,” a set of living and growing mycelium sculptures. By manipulating the substrate necessary for mycelium (Reishi) to reproduce itself, my vision came alive as “newborns" (I used a mold of a baby doll head to establish the connection), which were inoculated with mushrooms spores. With the help of custom made incubators the mycelium (and other unexpected “neighbors") had spread taking over the shape of the sculpture. The process of growth is my driving force.
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Chantal Dupas, Canada
My work is rooted in a reflective interest in the cyclical and fragile nature of life. Through my studio practice and research, I have gravitated towards themes such as consumption, death and transformation in various capacities. Often, inspiration for bodies of work begins with analyses of certain experiences within natural environments, whether intentional or coincidental. I am motivated by the discovery of natural occurrences new to me and bring this sense of wonder and awe towards the mysteries of life into the studio, where I inevitably begin to question my affinities with and aversions to the world around us. My work has responded to phenomena in places ranging from the Arctic Ocean to the foothills of Connecticut and to my own back yard. My most recent ventures have been delving into the world of botany, which stemmed from a residency at Riding Mountain National Park. Embracing my compulsion towards fact-based research and organization/categorization, I question whether these systems confront fears of mortality and perhaps are ways we deal with and control time. At the core of my practice, I am searching for experiences that remind me that I am within the natural systems I seek to gather information from.
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Kristi Beisecker,USA
Fern, Kirlian Photography
In the Spring of 2012 I took a class in Alternative Photography as part of my degree in Graphic and Interactive Design. I am also into spirituality and as part of this interest I discovered Kirlian Photography or as I like to term it - Electrography. Kirlian Photography is made using high voltage electricity to expose objects on photo sensitive paper. In the realm of spirituality this photo process is said to capture the life force energy of organic materials, thus using it as a scientific process. Those who use the process look at it in a scientific mind frame and just photograph one object. Seeing its' potential as an art form, I took the process and reinvigorated it to be compatible with traditional darkroom processing. As this process was originally developed to use Polaroid film - which is expensive now - my college only had darkroom processing so I used the materials that were available to me. In the creation process, I applied my design skills of composition, relationships to elements on the page and how to arrange objects on a page where the energy flowed through the design. To me these photographs aren't just photograms but a cultivation of my entire knowledge as an artist.
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Jackie Dorage, USA
K-Pg Boundary Oil on Canvas 30 x 30 inch
My work combines factual substance and scientific research with creative narratives to enlighten viewers and emotionally mimic the thrill of scientific discovery. Through reading journals, articles, and books, and partnering with scientists and conservationists, I weave together a story that visually represents the research while allowing the mystery of the unknown to persist. Accompanying each piece is a short statement or quote, meant to give the audience insight into the research behind the work, allowing the viewer to feel a sense of discovery and knowledge gaining from a piece of art.
Everything we witness—a flock of birds or a beetle on a leaf—has a deeper, sometimes unseen function that is interconnected with the environment around it. Whether I'm exploring the increasing role of marine “pollutogens” spread by cats or the fantastical qualities of the K-Pg boundary acting as a bookmark in Earths geological history, my main goal is illustrating the complex, living realities and mysteries of our natural world.
Through combining hard science with fantastical art, I hope to send my viewers on a journey mimicking the arch and thrill of research and learning—intrigue, questioning, investigation, and, finally, discovery.
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Biophilia July 2014
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Susan Rochester, USA
The foolishness of the chase ached her heart, 20 x 16 inches, Archival pigment print
My work examines the borders existing between natural and artificial habitats. I am interested in the trails humans and animals carve out and follow as they travel through their respective environments. Invisible boundaries dictate how comfortable beings are as their paths of travel intersect routes created by others. Human development denies and obliterates natural trails and habitats, yet animals continue to prevail in the face of the destruction of ecosystems. I am also fascinated and baffled by the human response to the natural world. The eradication of predators (to prevent real and/or imagined threats) leads to an overabundance of prey animals, which are then deemed as nuisances. Solutions range from repellent sprays to issuing suburban hunting licenses--yet rarely is there a careful consideration of what could happen if we just let things be. In my most recent series Trespasses, I explore what might occur if human-animal boundaries were more fluid, even permeable. Animals seem more adaptable to human encroachment than humans are to animal presence. But what if humans were equally adaptable? What if more doors and windows were left open? How would animals adapt, and what would happen to the human environment?
I was granted generous access to the natural history collections of the Douglas County Museum of Cultural and Natural History for this project. The museum holds over 1,000 freeze-dried specimens of local fauna. The preservation process retains the skeletal structure of the animals, and there is a resulting life-like quality to many of them that is uncanny. My inspiration for the resulting images comes from the formalism of still life traditions, especially the combination of the living (or lifelike) with the dead, and the concept of memento mori. I find additional inspiration in the darker aspects of folk tales and stories in which animals are anthropomorphized.
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Helga Jakobson, Canada
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Flayed Frankenstein, Plasticized Hosta Leaves, Thread, Plant Matter, 2014
My work often incorporates detritus from my immediate atmosphere. Whether natural components of the Manitoba landscape or relics from my great grandparents’ homestead. I spend my time photographing and exploring the rural landscapes of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Iceland and elsewhere for inspiration. My travels have lead me to many derelict and abandoned buildings. Through visiting these places I feel that I have been able to gain a further understanding of spirituality and philosophy. I strive to focus on my personal experience as a springboard for exploration into ideas outside of my limited understanding. Through this process, I revel in attempting to create objects which quantify my own experiences. In my inevitable failure to do so, I feel as though I am able to express the space between ourselves and the outside world. Translating my inner landscape becomes an ambiguous representation of interiors which are occupied by all of us. Because of the specificity of my intent, the objects that I create are imbued with an aura of which I hope the viewer can explore and potentially find personal resonance with.
Currently, I am exploring the role of the feminine within science while endeavoring to express a less gendered perspective in understanding biology, inorganic/organic life, and evolution. My practice focuses on a hands-on approach to understanding scientific process as an access point into philosophical ideologies. |
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Natalie Draz, Canada
Natalie Draz is an artist working across multiple disciplines of printmaking, installation and fibres to create environments of expereintial mapmaking, storytelling and transformation of bodies. Investigating the structures of books, maps and anatomical studies as a source of alternative documentation and storytelling, Natalie creates works transgress the boundaries of book and body. Accessed through visual narrative strategies of pop-up books, engaging installations, and intimate moments of discovery and transformation through personal micro-narratives and sketches. Instead, her sculptural works touch upon installations; experiential environments; fragmentary visual texts to be pieced together by each individual viewer.
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Biophilia August 2014 |
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Laura Grossett, USA
A Thin Barier, hand manipulated inkjet print on mylar, graphite. 11x8.5", 2013
I am attracted to ideas of preservation, absence and what it means to try and hold on to a thing or an idea as it slips away. This line of thought often leads me to thinking about endangered species and deforestation. In a very general sense, my work reflects an observation of the natural world. I find forms and patterns that I respond to and that is where I begin. I often draw from specimens. I used to work in a specimen collection library where I cataloged bird skins. I still find it peculiar to be in the presence of one of these static mimicries. The feeling is especially poignant the individual is from an extinct or endangered species. Did did we assist in their depopulation in this one small way? Maybe it will be in the interest of the greater good, sometimes the scientific data those skins provide help us manage current wildlife populations more effectively. Well, we were able to save at least one.... sort of. But, irony aside, it is a beautiful sort of honor- this preservation of a life. When I worked in the collection room we spent time carefully organizing, labeling and tending to the bird mummies. In some ways it was reminiscent of human burial traditions where the body is embalmed after death (although, in the case of bird skins, they were usually killed for the sole purpose of scientific study). For awhile I made little bird skins out of metal and plastic: tiny forms that would last forever- even longer than the century-old specimens that inspired them. After this I started another series where I cut similar shapes from sheet metal and embossed them into paper using an etching press. To me these were symbolic of voids- they were the literal impressions left behind after death.
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Sarah Fagan, USA
Sustain, acrylic on paper, 21" x 16"
In a blend of painterly strokes and trompe l'oeil, I paint everyday objects in the medium of acrylic on panel. Like the vanitas painters of the Dutch Baroque, quotidian objects become symbols for something more. I offer not solely a reflection on mortality, but human psychology. Turning my back on the point of view typically employed by still life painters, I present my subjects from a direct aerial perspective, sans environment. The resulting visual immediacy forces confrontation between object and viewer. Accordingly, I consider the sensual and visual, as well as cerebral, impacts the chosen objects may deliver. I choose objects with a visceral draw: objects meant to be touched or used. As someone with synesthesia, wherein senses cross, I find this tactile impetus as natural for me as it is meaningful to the viewer. The concept of the hand is of import. Craftsmen tools, utensils, writing implements, and found natural objects engage the hand and, and thus the body, through the eye. These are "active" objects. As a foil to active objects is the "empty" object: the object of potential. Empty articles of clothing, blank sheets of paper, and smooth stones are vessels into which viewers may project their own emotions, tensions, completions, and gut reactions. These projections are the impetus of my work. The viewer takes on an active role not only by bringing her own connotations, memories, and histories to the objects themselves, but by unconsciously delving into her individual psychology when imagining narrative or meaning in composition. By visually grouping, pairing, and categorizing objects, I use the gesture of science without the technicality. I use a language that invites meaning without explanation. I orchestrate compositions with the recognition that symmetry and aestheticism invite contemplation. These qualities both draw in the eye and, in their artifice, allow the viewer to enter a world beyond the object. By deliberately pairing objects with one another, cropped landscapes, and fields of color, the concept of narrative and meaning emerge, even though meaning itself may be veiled. What is of import is not the meaning I impose, but the need for the collective consciousness to find meaning in pattern, to see didacticism in arrangements. Likewise, it is not the unknown narrative that matters, but the human mind's necessity to make one. I place this onus on the viewer, as the most profound meanings come from within. Sartre famously explained this need with the phrase "existence precedes essence." As an artist, I search for pattern and meaning in the natural world, or study the framework of systems, charts, and graphs created by man. As various minds arrange systems and graft meaning on objects, interpretations are infinite.
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Sophie Lindsey, England
Grass Work, 2013
As my work stems from observations, I predominantly make work about the everyday and art itself. However, I have a keen interest in the natural environment and enjoyed studying physical geography in education. This led me to partake in a placement in the Geology department at the University of Brighton. While I was able to create work throughout this, the main focus of my placement was comparing the similarities between art and geology. This led to Cross-Curricular: Art and Geology, a project which introduced geological samples into an art environment and land art into a geology lecture. However, as this placement was within a teaching framework the work was heavily informed by the way in which both disciplines were taught.
I am particularly interested in our relationship as humans to the natural world, and how we have progressed far beyond our natural state. Human manipulation of the environment is something I have briefly explored on my previous placement, and I am interested to see whether this is such a strong feature in Canada, as it is very prevalent in UK.In considering these aspects combined with the approach I take in my practice, I anticipate creating something intervention based, potentially highlighting the bizarre conventions with have applied to life as a way to distance ourselves from the environment. However, the experience of Biophilia will undoubtedly shape what I make during and after the residency, and this may cause me to produce something I am unable to anticipate. |