Thanks to the collaborative work of Washington College professors and local advocates for the arts and the environment, April 3-6 will offer Chestertown residents and visitors a long weekend packed with events that showcase creative responses to environmental challenges. Titled “Sensing Change,” the program will feature talks, poetry, documentary films, art exhibitions and concerts by acclaimed national and regional talents. With the exception of the final multi-media concert on Sunday, all events are free.
The weekend kicks off Thursday, April 3, at 5 p.m. at Washington College with a presentation by visionary artist and technologist Natalie Jeremijenko, founder and director of the xDesign Environmental Health Clinic at New York University. She will deliver the SANDBOX Spring Lecture in Decker Theatre on the topic, “On Cross Dressing Bicycles, Wrestling Rhinoceros Beetles, Flowering Buildings and Hula Hooping to address the pollinator crisis, or What is an Environmental Health Clinic and why would they pay me to ride my bike?”
Jeremijenko, an assistant professor of art at NYU, earned undergraduate degrees in biochemistry and physics and a Ph.D. in computer science and electrical engineering in her native Australia, and then completed further graduate studies in neuroscience and mechanical engineering in the U.S. This thorough immersion in science and engineering, combined with her wildly original conceptual art, makes her a perfect choice to speak as part of SANDBOX, which celebrates environmental projects at that intersection of art and science.
Among Jeremijenko’s recent projects were robotic dogs that sniffed out environmental toxins, and a system of buoys and sensors that allowed people to text to the fish and monitor the water quality in a section of New York’s East River. Jeremijenko has said that she likes to create spectacles and “eco-mindshifts.” She has shown her work at the Whitney Biennial, the Guggenheim and the Museum of Modern Art and been praised as one of the world’s most influential designers (I.D. Magazine) and one of the most influential women in technology (Fast Company). The Environmental Health Lab she directs at N.Y.U. sends its “impatients” home with “prescriptions” for how to remedy environmental health threats in their homes and communities.
The next day brings several events to downtown Chestertown as part of April’s First Friday, beginning at 5 p.m. with the opening of a new exhibition at the Carla Massoni Gallery, 203 High Street, and an open house at the new SANDBOX studio, 107 S. Cross Street.
The environmentally focused artists featured in the exhibition, Timeless Rhythms: Sensing Change, include John Ruppert, the first SANDBOX Distinguished Visitor; painter Greg Mort, founder of the Art of Stewardship Project; and the three women involved in the Ice to Island Project and the documentary Goodbye Ice, Goodbye Island — filmmaker Drew Denny and artists Zaria Forman and Lisa Lebofsky. Also on display will be work by Grace Mitchell, Heidi Fowler, Deborah Weiss and Leigh Wen.
That evening at 7:30 in the Garfield Center for the Arts at the Prince Theater, 210 High Street, The Chester River Association and Sunrise Solar Inc. present the documentary Chasing Ice, which features National Geographic photographer James Balog’s multi-year, time-lapse photography of the changing Arctic landscape.
Saturday, April 5, the action continues at the Garfield Center from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. with an artists’ panel, a reading by poet Meredith Davies Hadaway, a high-tech music premier, and a sneak preview of Goodbye Ice, Goodbye Island. John Seidel, director of Washington College’s Center for Environment & Society, and SANDBOX director Alex Castro will moderate the discussion as artists featured in the Massoni Gallery exhibition talk about the interplay of science, art and creativity in their careers.
Meredith Hadaway is a poet who lives and writes on the Chester River. She has published two volumes of her poetry, The River is a Reason and Fishing Secrets of the Dead, and a third, At the Narrows, is scheduled for publication this summer. She currently serves as the writer in residence at the Rose O’Neill Literary House and will participate this summer in the first Bread Loaf Orion Environmental Writers’ Conference.
Following the poetry, the chair of the Washington College Music Department, Ken Schweitzer will take the stage with students from his Advanced Music Technology class. They will perform their original composition, “Icelandic Sea Wall,” which was inspired by John Ruppert’s photograph of the same name.
The afternoon session ends with filmmaker Drew Denny presenting excerpts from Goodbye Ice, Goodbye Island. Still in the editing phase, the film documents how two cultures—one in the sinking Maldive Islands and the other in shrinking Greenland—are preparing to see their landscapes and way of life disappear because of rising temperatures and water levels. (Also an actress and writer, Denny is best known for her highly acclaimed first feature film, The Most Fun I’ve Had with My Pants On.)
The themed weekend of arts comes to a dramatic close Sunday afternoon back at Washington College with a multi-media concert titled “Beyond the Line of Blue” and inspired by American folk songs, poetry and art. Part of the Premier Artists series of the Washington College Concert Series, the April 6 concert starts at 2:30 p.m. in Decker Theatre and will feature tenor Christopher Swanson, the Anderson/Fader Guitar Duo and composer and guitarist Damon Ferrante, along with films and video projections by Alessandro Bonini.
Weaving themes of water, surrealism, the passage of time and the unconscious, the program will include the composition “Beyond the Line of Blue: An Operatic Monodrama with Video Projections,” based on the poetry of Edgar Allan Poe and Walt Whitman; “American Folk Songs with Video Projections; “The Footbridge: A Guitar Duo,” inspired by the sculpture of Alexander Calder; and “Divinità Minori: Solo Guitar Pieces with Video Projections,” inspired by the contemporary paintings of Christopher Engel.
Concert tickets ($20 for adults; $15 for seniors, students over age 12, and WC faculty/staff; free for children ages 12 and under) can be reserved in advance or purchased at the door. For more information, call 410-778-7839, email [email protected], or visit concertseries.washcoll.edu.
Art gallery owner Carla Massoni spearheaded the creation of the themed weekend when she became aware of several independently organized events that already centered on the intersection where environmental science and art meet. A tireless advocate for cross-promoting arts and cultural events in the area to build awareness and audiences, Massoni found ready partners in Washington College’s SANDBOX initiative, Music Department and Center for Environment & Society, along with the Chester River Association, the Kent County Arts Council and others.
The title of the weekend-long program is inspired by a SANDBOX lecture given at the College last October by Jody Roberts, director of the Center for Contemporary History and Policy at the Chemical Heritage Foundation in Philadelphia. That lecture, “Sensing Change: How Art and Science Work to Communicate Environmental Change,” underscored how artists help the public understand environmental threats by making them more visual and personal. “It’s the artists and scientists who are often the first in society to discover the effects of environmental shifts and threats,” says Massoni. “We want to listen and learn from what these creative minds have to say, especially about the issues being raised by climate change.”
“Sensing Change” at a Glance:
Thursday, April 3
5 p.m. – Talk by Natalie Jeremijenko
Decker Theatre, Gibson Center for the Arts
Washington College, 300 Washington Avenue
Friday, April 4
5 to 7:30 p.m. – Opening of Timeless Rhythms at Massoni Gallery
203 High Street
5 to 7:30 p.m. – Open House at SANDBOX Studio
107 Cross Street
7:30 p.m. – Film screening, Chasing Ice
Garfield Center, 210 High Street
Saturday, April 5
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. – “Sensing Change” Dialogue
Garfield Center, 210 High Street
Artists panel moderated by Alex Castro and John Seidel; Poetry reading by Meredith Davies Hadaway; Premier of “Icelandic Sea Wall” by WC music professor Ken Schweitzer and students; Preview of documentary Goodbye Ice, Goodbye Island.
Sunday, April 6
2:30 p.m. – Multi-media Concert, “Beyond the Line of Blue”
Decker Theatre, Gibson Center for the Arts
Washington College, 300 Washington Avenue
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