Below is the information about our upcoming conference, a large part of this planning project. Online registration is available here!
Beyond the Surface: Environmental Art in Action
Hosted by the Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education
May 31, 2013
Join us for a day of ideas and innovative thinking, investigating relationships between art and nature.
Conference Description
How can environmental art engage the environment and the individual, activate awareness, and integrate perspectives that result in unexpected and innovative approaches to environmental literacy?
While the natural world has captured the imagination of artists for centuries, more and more of today’s artists are thinking beyond the studio, blending art, science and social practice with a fresh sense of immediacy, connecting art to nature and environmental issues. No longer content with scratching the surface of environmental problems, these artists want to move beyond the surface, engaging audiences to become part of the solution.
This conference brings a team of cutting-edge environmental artists and arts professionals to Philadelphia to share this work with you, to discuss ways art can create environmental awareness while restoring ecological systems.
The artists presenting at the conference have been working with these ideas for much of their careers. To call attention to climate change, for example, Eve Mosher painted a high-water line across Manhattan, showing people where the water would rise to if sea-level projections occur. Stacy Levy’s artwork in the Schuylkill Center’s Sensory Garden remediates our building’s stormwater, which had been compromising our own forest. Lillian Ball projected a shifting, multicolored map of the Arctic circle onto a sphere of ice, the ice melting even as the projected image showed a vanishing Arctic.
The Schuylkill Center’s Art Department has brought artists to its 340 acre site since 2001. This year, the Center has gone further, examining how art intersects with other disciplines –education, ecology, architecture, engineering and planning, to name a few, to create fresh innovations and exciting experiences for the public. Our project has brought together an Advisory Team of the artists and curators who work in the field of environmental art. (Please visit www.schuylkillcenter.org/art for more information about this project, the team and to read their blogs).
We believe art can help to repair a broken relationship between humans and nature and simultaneously transform audiences from passive observers of art to active participants in ecosystems.
We are re-thinking how art exists at nature centers, and are eager to share these findings with our colleagues in the art and environmental communities. We welcome artists, educators, environmentalists, scientists, designers, landscape architects, teachers and students of all ages to this groundbreaking event.
Conference Schedule
Morning Session: 9 am – 12 pm
1. Welcome by Schuylkill Center Executive Director Mike Weilbacher
2. Introduction by Jenny Laden, the Schuylkill Center’s Director of Environmental Art, and Deenah Loeb, SCEE trustee and chair of the Environmental Art Committee
3. Environmental Art Advisory Team Presentations:
Lunch: 1 – 2 pm
Optional site visit: Take aninformal walk throughout SCEE lands with SCEE staff to the pine grove or Penn’s Native Acres
Afternoon:
1. Breakout Groups: 2 – 3:30 pm
Afternoon Breakout groups will delve more deeply (guided by members of Environmental Art Advisory Team)
I. Engage Eve Mosher/Amy Lipton
II. Integrate Frances Whitehead/Stacy Levy
III. Activate Lillian Ball/ Sam Bower
2. RainYard presentation by Stacy Levy: 4 – 4:45 pm
Levy discusses rainwater, and creating a permanent ecovention at SCEE.
3. Closing: 4:45 pm
4. Outdoor reception: 5 – 6 pm
Celebrate Levy’s new installation with refreshments in the Sensory Garden.
Conference Registration
Conference admission fee $80
Schuylkill Center member discounted admission $60
Students, artists, educators discounted admission $40
Early Registration Special: Until March 31, a 20% discount will be applied at checkout
For more information, call our art department 215 482 7300 x 113 or visit our website: www.schuylkillcenter.org/art
Or email [email protected]
This even is funded in part by the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage and The National Endowment of the Arts.