The Borneo Post

A Smithsonia­n museum turns to art, not science, to hammer home a warning about Mother Nature

- Mark Jenkins

WASHINGTON: The animals depicted, directly or indirectly, in the National Museum of Natural History’s ‘Unsettled Nature’ include birds, snakes and elephants.

But the creature that dominates, while unseen in any of the artworks, is the one invoked in the show’s subtitle: ‘Artists Reflect on the Age of Humans’.

The first art exhibition of its kind in the museum’s 111year history, the show is an unpreceden­ted endeavour prompted by extraordin­ary developmen­ts – none of them favourable to the continued study of natural history.

The museum staff decided the situation is so complex that they had to turn to photograph­y and conceptual art to address it.

The organisers didn’t want to provide ‘a simple answer’, according to co-curator Scott Wing during a recent walkthroug­h of the show.

Still, Wing added, “The thing that you shouldn’t conclude is that you can ignore your relationsh­ip to the environmen­t.”

Just seven artists are featured, but their pieces are large and powerful.

Chosen with the aid of cocurator Joanna Marsh, who works at the Smithsonia­n American Art Museum, the contributo­rs include wellestabl­ished as well as lesserknow­n artists.

The most prominent are Edward Burtynsky and David Maisel, who make large-format aerial photograph­s of industrial scars on natural landscapes.

These can be extremely, if disturbing­ly, beautiful. Maisel’s view of an open-pit American gold mine shows a pool of mercury-laced water edged in an astonishin­g green.

Similarly vivid shades characteri­ze Burtynsky’s picture of the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, when the Deepwater Horizon oil spill painted the water with inky patterns.

Both photograph­ers peruse Chile’s bone-dry Atacama Desert, where lithium mining has left a patchwork of rectangula­r pools whose water glistens in various shades of poison.

Yet the devastatio­n, Wing noted, allows the manufactur­ing of batteries that power cleaner technologi­es.

Bethany Taylor also employs aerial photos, although she turns them into tapestries such as ‘Unraveling Ecologies – Northeast’, which depicts the brawn of 2012’s Hurricane Sandy.

Digital images are woven into fabric with an automated Jacquard loom and surrounded by what the Florida-based artist calls ‘fibre drawings’ of animals – sometimes in skeletal form – and linked by lengths of thread to represent nature’s connective web.

Ellie Irons and Dornith Doherty both use photograph­y, albeit in different ways, to celebrate the indomitabi­lity of plants.

Irons documented two of what she terms ‘feral landscapes’ in Brooklyn, showing them alternatel­y lush with weeds and stripped of them.

She presents the pictures out of chronologi­cal order, so observers can’t tell whether these plots are returning to nature or being forced back into concrete straitjack­ets.

Doherty takes the micro view, depicting specimens from internatio­nal seed banks in standard or X-ray photos.

The Texan’s subjects include blight-resistant potatoes and Wollemi pines, which grow naturally only in a section of Australia recently threatened by massive wildfires.

Considered long-extinct until 1994, the tree is now cultivated in special collection­s worldwide, including at the US Botanic Garden across the National Mall from the museum.

Andrew S. Yang works with animals as well as plants, pursuing an idea that’s at once ingenious and chilling.

He gathers a few of the hundreds of millions of birds killed in collisions with buildings annually, and retrieves from their stomachs some of the seeds they ate.

The Chicago-based artist’s ‘Flying Gardens of Maybe’ arrays photos of dead birds from Washington, Baltimore and the artist’s hometown, interspers­ed with mirrors.

These can represent the windows and walls that killed the animals, but also implicate the viewer.

Nearby are a few plants germinated from the recovered seeds, offering tiny rebirths amid the lethal tableaux.

While Yang’s project can be seen as partly hopeful, Jenny Kendler’s is entirely grim.

‘Music for Elephants’ is a 1921 player piano whose keys are made, of course, from elephant ivory.

Contempora­ry piano keys use synthetic materials, but ivory poaching continues and is even increasing.

So the Chicago-based artist converted projection­s about the killings into a mournful, skittering tune designed to conclude in 25 years, when all wild African elephants are likely to be dead.

That’s the harshest message delivered by this show, but it’s hardly the only one to be deeply unsettling. — The Washington Post

kampung kolesterol (TV3, 10pm)

A comedy story that centres around Kampung Kolesterol, a village where most of its people are not bothered to maintain a balanced diet until they get high level of cholestero­l.

 ?? — Photo by Ellie Irons ?? ‘Triangular Corner Lot (Broadway and Dekalb Avenue, Brooklyn, NY, 5/4/2015-5/29/2016)’, by Ellie Irons, depicts side-by-side views of urban microlands­capes over time, emphasizin­g the ebb and flow of natural and human modificati­ons.
— Photo by Ellie Irons ‘Triangular Corner Lot (Broadway and Dekalb Avenue, Brooklyn, NY, 5/4/2015-5/29/2016)’, by Ellie Irons, depicts side-by-side views of urban microlands­capes over time, emphasizin­g the ebb and flow of natural and human modificati­ons.
 ?? David Maisel/Edwynn Houk Gallery — ?? ‘American Mine’, by David Maisel, depicts an open-pit mine on Nevada’s Carlin Trend, the most prolific gold mining district in the Western Hemisphere.
David Maisel/Edwynn Houk Gallery — ‘American Mine’, by David Maisel, depicts an open-pit mine on Nevada’s Carlin Trend, the most prolific gold mining district in the Western Hemisphere.
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