San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Kelp forests inspire exhibits

‘Ebb and Flow’ at UC San Diego and ‘Hold Fast’ at the Birch Aquarium feature historic specimens and artists’ interpreta­tions

- BY PAM KRAGEN pam.kragen@sduniontri­bune.com

Over the past 134 years, the giant kelp forests off the coast of Southern California have been studied by marine scientists at labs like the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy at UC San Diego in La Jolla.

The history of these underwater ecosystems and how artists are interpreti­ng them today are the subject of “Ebb and Flow,” an exhibition now under way at the Geisel Library on the UC San Diego campus, and “Hold Fast,” an immersive exhibit opening Feb. 8 at the Birch Aquarium at Scripps Institutio­n.

“Ebb and Flow” features recent photograph­s, watercolor­s, sculpture and more alongside actual specimens of seaweed harvested off the La Jolla coast from the collection of the Scripps Institutio­n, the UC San Diego Library’s Special Collection­s & Archives, and the San Diego Natural History Museum’s botany collection.

The seaweed pressings were created in La Jolla between 1890 and 2023 by citizens and scientists including Ellen Browning Scripps, Eliza Virginia Scripps, Mary S. Snyder, Paul C. Silva and current Scripps Institutio­n professor Jennifer E. Smith. The specimens are intended to highlight the value of natural history and collection­s, especially as our environmen­t shifts.

The giant kelp forests off the coast of La Jolla, Del Mar, Cardiff and Encinitas declined in size by nearly 90 percent due to a spike in coastal ocean water temperatur­es in 2014 and 2015. Work is now under way by scientists at the Scripps Institutio­n and other scientific organizati­ons to restore these forests. “Ebb and Flow” illuminate­s the evolution and the persistenc­e of giant kelp forests, which have changed over time but continue to hold fast to the rocky shorelines.

“Ebb and Flow” was curated by San Diego photograph­er, marine scientist and Scripps Institutio­n alumna Oriana Poindexter. It opened Jan. 12 on the main floor of the Geisel Library in both its main gallery and in The Nest. The public is invited to a free opening reception for the exhibit at 6 p.m. Thursday.

“Similar to our Art of Science contest, this exhibit celebrates the intersecti­on of art and science in a way that brings much-needed attention to key issues that affect society and our planet,” said Erik Mitchell, university librarian at UC San Diego Library. “I am also pleased to see archival works from our Special Collection­s & Archives included in the show and that a UC San Diego alumna has curated this exhibit.”

Some of the kelp-inspired artwork in the exhibition was created by Poindexter as well as Julia C R Gray, Dwight Hwang and Marie Mckenzie, who work in a variety of media, including alternativ­e photograph­ic processes, gyotaku printmakin­g, oil painting, installati­on art, ceramic and sculpture.

“Giant kelp forests are unique environmen­ts that many feel powerfully drawn to,” Poindexter said. “Our fascinatio­n with this environmen­t is collective­ly interprete­d through observatio­n and documentat­ion, manifestin­g in forms varying from pressed herbaria to contempora­ry art.

“My aim with this collection is to encourage viewers to collect their own observatio­ns of the nature around them as a means of both engaging in and contributi­ng to the collective body of knowledge, and as an individual practice that can foster personal growth, self-care and investment in environmen­tal health.”

As a 2015 graduate of UC San Diego, Poindexter said having the opportunit­y to exhibit at Geisel Library is “a great honor.”

“I am grateful to the library for being open to host this exhibit to showcase the ebb and flow of the giant kelp forests through time and demonstrat­e the resilience and persistenc­e of these species despite the anthropoge­nic impacts that complicate their existence,” she said.

Poindexter also co-curated “Hold Fast,” the immersive exhibit for all ages opening next month at Birch Aquarium at Scripps. “Hold Fast” specifical­ly explores San Diego’s local kelp forests and climate change through the lens of three local artists and scientists who use their talents to raise awareness about climate change.

In “Hold Fast,” aquarium guests will weave their way through a labyrinth of cyanotype-printed giant kelp created by Poindexter, study the details of local fish and kelp species in gyotaku prints created by Dwight Hwang, and observe current kelp forest mapping by Scripps Oceanograp­hy doctoral student Mohammad Sedarat.

“Warming waters and giant kelp don’t mix,” said Megan Dickerson, Birch

‘Ebb and Flow: Giant Kelp Forests Through Art, Science and the Archives’

When: Public opening reception 6 p.m. Thursday. Exhibit continues through April 21.

Geisel Library,

UC San Diego campus, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla

Free library.ucsd.edu/newsevents/events/ebb-and-flow

‘Hold Fast’

When: Opens Feb. 8; hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily

Where: Birch Aquarium at Scripps

Tickets: $24.95 adults; $19.95 children 3 to 17

Online: aquarium.ucsd.edu

Aquarium’s director of exhibits and co-curator of the installati­on with Poindexter. “We have to be realistic about the outsize impact that climate change has on our local giant kelp forests. But at the same time, local people are doing beautiful things. This ‘Hold Fast’ installati­on posits that the actions of local artists and scientists can give us hope that together, as a community, we can make collective change as we also acknowledg­e climate trauma.”

Poindexter said that it’s important to her to chronicle the ebb and flow of the kelp forest as part of her artistic process.

“My method to engage with the giant kelp forests is to free dive in, around, through them — and to collect specimens from which to artistical­ly document both the environmen­t and the experience,” she said. “The physicalit­y of this process is therapeuti­c for me as I grapple with the impacts of humanity on the environmen­t.”

 ?? UC SAN DIEGO PHOTOS ?? “Holdfast SHE,” a 2023 torso sculpture by Julia C R Gray that includes a depiction of giant kelp.
UC SAN DIEGO PHOTOS “Holdfast SHE,” a 2023 torso sculpture by Julia C R Gray that includes a depiction of giant kelp.
 ?? ?? “Giant Kelp Study 96 (Macrocysti­s pyrifera)” by Oriana Poindexter.
“Giant Kelp Study 96 (Macrocysti­s pyrifera)” by Oriana Poindexter.
 ?? ?? “Balance: Ascend,” a walnut oil painting on wood panel by Marie Mckenzie.
“Balance: Ascend,” a walnut oil painting on wood panel by Marie Mckenzie.
 ?? ?? A specimen of giant kelp collected by Jennifer E. Smith.
A specimen of giant kelp collected by Jennifer E. Smith.
 ?? ?? Where:
Admission: Online:
Where: Admission: Online:

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