William Alburger, Forest, 2013, 65" x 108" x 9" rescued spalted birch, in an solo exhibition at GRACE |
Eco-friendly art is meeting the world of high art, if we're to take a cue from what's showing at local art centers and galleries. It can be stated that the earliest environmental art started with the artists' visions and applied those visions to the environment, with little interest in sustainability.
Quite the opposite trend is developing now. Several emerging artists, the “environmental artists” of
the 21st century put nature in the center--not the artist or the idea. Nature is the subject and the artist is nature's follower. The following artists' creations are about the land and earth; other artists interested in the environment have been more concerned with a world under the sea.
William Alburger lives in rural Pennsylvania, where he picks up scraps of wood from fallen trees and mixes them with discarded barn doors. He is a passionate conservationist with an addiction to collecting what otherwise would be burned, decayed or discarded in landfills. Largely self-taught, Alburger formerly worked as a painting contractor. His art is both pictorial and practical. Some sculptures almost look like two-dimensional works, while others function as shelves or furniture. Hidden doors, cubbyholes and cabinets create surprises, making the natural world his starting point for expression. Intrusions of man-made items are minor. The knots, whirls, colors and textures of wood speak for themselves, revealing rustic beauty.
William Alburger, Non-traditional Backwards One-Door, 2012, 27" x. 13.5" x 5.25 reclaimed Pennsylvania barn wood, specialty glass and fabric |
William Alburger, Synapse, 2013, 65" x 23" x 5.25" rescued spalted poplar and Pennsylvania barn wood |
Currently the Greater Reston Area Arts Center (GRACE) is hosting a solo exhibition of Alburger's works. In Synapse, Alburger cut into the interesting grain and patterns of fallen poplar. He framed top and bottom with old barn wood and reconfigured the form to suggest the space where two forms meet and form connection. Allburger finds what is already there in nature, but, through presentation, teaches us how to see it in a new way. Otherwise, we might not notice what nature can evoke and teach us.
Pam Rogers, Tertiary Education, 2012, handmade soil, mineral and plant pigments, ink, watercolor and graphite on paper. Courtesy Greater Reston Area Art Association |
Dedication to the natural world is second nature to Pam Rogers, whose day job is as an illustrator in the Natural History Museum of the Smithsonian Institution. “I’m inclined to see environment as shaping all of us,” Rogers explains, noting the importance of where we come from, and how our natural surroundings mark our stories and connections. While drawing natural specimens, she sees as much beauty in decay is as in birth, growth and development. We’re reminded that everything that comes alive, by nature or made by man, will turn to dust. Rogers' drawings combine plants, animals and occasional pieces of hardware. Some of the pigments spring from nature, the red soil of North Georgia and plant pigments.
As in Alburger's Synapse, above, Rogers seeks to form connections between man and the environment. She inserts nails and other links into the drawings from nature for this purpose, as in Stolen Mythology, below. At the moment, Pam Rogers' art is in the show, {Agri Interior} in the Wyatt Gallery at the Arlington Arts Center. One of her paintings is now in a group exhibition, Strictly Painting, at McLean Project for the Arts.
Pam Rogers, Stolen Mythology, 2009 mixed media |
Rogers mixes traditional art techniques with abstraction, natural with man-made, sticks and strings, and does both delicate two-dimensional works and vigorous three-dimensional art. Her sculptures and installations explore some of the same themes. At the end of last year, she had an exhibition at GRACE called Cairns. Cairns refer to a Gaelic term to describe a man-made pile of stones that function as markers. Her work, whether two-dimensional or three-dimensional, is also about the markers signifying the connections in her journey.
"There are landmarks and guides that permeate my continuing journey and my exploration of the relationship between people, plants and place. I continually try to weave the strings of agriculture, myth and magic, healing and hurting." Several of her paintings have titles referring to myths, including Stolen Mythology, above, and another one called Potomac Myths. Originally from Colorado, Rogers also lived in Massachusetts and studied in Savannah for her Masters in Fine Art. It's not surprising that, in college, she had a double major in Anthropology and Art History.
Henrique Oliveira, Bololô, Wood, hardware, pigment Site-specific installation, National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution Photograph by Franko Khoury, National Museum of African Art |
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Danielle Riede, My Favorite Colors, 2006, photo courtesy http://www.jardin-eco-culture.com/ |
Sustainable Growths: Painting with Recycled Materials is Riede's project to bring meaning to abandoned homes in Indianapolis. Artist's photo |
R L Croft, Portal, 2011, Oregon Inlet, North Carolina |
Environmentalism is not the primary content of his art. Croft says: "Making art for the purpose of being an environmentalist doesn’t interest me. Making art whose process is environmentally friendly does interest me." He works in rivers, woods and on beaches. In the aftermath of one natural disaster, Hurricane Irene, he brought meaning to the incident--both personal and anthropological.
Hurricane Irene "is much like the resilient community frequently raked over by severe hurricanes, yet plunging forward. The current art center is world class and it is the replacement for an earlier one destroyed when still new. " Croft said. Shipwreck Irene is still there, but decay renders it increasingly unrecognizable as a ship form. The temporary aspect is expected. "People of the region know grit and impermanence," the artist explained. "I'm told that Shipwreck Irene became a habitat for small animals and small birds but that is a happy accident."
R L Croft, Sower, 2013, 22 x 14 courtesy artist |
Nature has been the subject of art by definition and a curiosity about the natural world has defined a majority of artists
since the Renaissance. The first wave of Environmental Artists applied their
vision to the environment by directly making changes to the
environment--permanent (Robert Smithson, James Turrell) or temporary (Christo and
Jeanne-Claude) Turrell ,whose most famous work is the Roden Crator in
Arizona, is the subject of a major retrospective now in New York, at the Guggenheim.
It is one thing for art to alter the environment, as the earliest environmental artists did. It is another thing to make art to call
attention to the problems of waste and depletion of the earth's resources. Yet, it's an even stronger statement when professional
artists exclusively make art that re-uses discarded items and turns them
into art. Environmental Art today addresses waste reduction and
stands up against the problems caused by environmental damage to our rapidly changing world. Designers are getting into this process, as explained in the previous blog. For example, Nani Marquina and Ariadna Miguel design and sell a rug made of discarded bicycle tubes, Bicicleta.In the future, I hope to blog on how artists address sustainable agriculture. Currently, the main exhibition at Arlington Arts Center, Green Acres: Artists Farming Fields, Greenhouses and Abandoned Lots.