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Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts

Sunday, April 12, 2020

Artists Reach Out: Clarinda Mac Low

Dear friends,

Welcome to Artists Reach Out: reflections in a time of isolation. I dreamed this series of interviews out of grief for my work both as a documenting arts writer and curator of live performance. In this time of social distancing, we are called to responsibly do all we can to safeguard ourselves and our neighbors. It is, literally, a matter of life and death.

But there's no distancing around what we still can share with one another--our experiences, thoughts, wisdom, humor, hearts and spirit. In some ways, there are more opportunities to do so as we pull back from everyday busyness out in the world and have time to honor the call of our inner lives.

So, let me introduce you to some artists I find interesting. I'm glad they're part of our beautiful community, and I'm eager to engage with them again (or for the first time) in years to come.

--Eva Yaa Asantewaa, InfiniteBody

Clarinda Mac Low


Clarinda Mac Low
(photo: Robin Michal)


Clarinda Mac Low was brought up in the avant-garde arts scene that flourished in NYC during the 1960s and ‘70s. She began performing with her father Jackson Mac Low and with Meredith Monk when she was 4 years old. Mac Low started out working in dance and molecular biology in the late 1980s and now works in performance and installation, creating participatory events that investigate social constructs and corporeal experience, while keeping up a practice of medical journalism, specializing in HIV/AIDS. She is co-founder and Executive Director of Culture Push, an experimental organization that links artistic practice and civic engagement and co-founder and co-director of Works on Water, an organization that supports art that works on, in, and with waterways, in response to a changing climate. Her work has appeared at Panoply Performance Laboratory, the EFA Project Space, P.S. 122, the Kitchen, X-Initiative, and many other places and spaces around New York City and elsewhere in the world, including the Manifesta Biennial in Spain. Recent work and ongoing projects include: Sunk Shore, participatory tours of the future rooted in climate change data; Incredible Witness, a series of game-based participatory events looking at the sensory origins of empathy; Free the Orphans, a project that seeks to “free” copyright orphans (creative work with unknown copyright holders), investigating the spiritual and intellectual implications of intellectual property in a digital age; The Year of Dance, an anthropology of the NYC dance world that that examines how bonds form in art-making to create unconventional family and kinship structures; TRYST, performance interventions in urban space; Cyborg Nation, public conversation on the technological body and intimacy; and Salvage/Salvation, a collaborative installation and performance project that explores the philosophical, emotional and material implications of re-use, discard, decay and abundance. She has also “performed” dramaturgy for Katy Pyle’s Ballez, David Thomson’s he his own mythical beast and Gender/Power (Maya Ciarrocchi and Kris Grey). Residencies include as a Back Apartment Resident in St. Petersburg through CEC (2019), as a MacDowell Fellow (2000, 2016), through the Society for Cultural Exchange in Pittsburgh (2007) and as a guest at Yaddo and Mount Tremper Arts (2012). She received a BAX Award in 2004, a Foundation for Contemporary Arts grant, 2007 and a 2010 Franklin Furnace Fund for Performance Art grant. Mac Low holds a BA, double major in Dance and Molecular Biology, from Wesleyan University and an MFA in Digital and Interdisciplinary Arts Practice from CCNY-CUNY.


Dancing with godson Masumi
(photo: Ian Douglas)
Clarinda Mac Low's Cyborg Nation
(photo: Walter Polkosnik)


Do you have a current or planned project whose progress is affected by the pandemic?
I have several projects that are affected and, because much of my work consists of nurturing other artists, I live in the echoes of others’ work that is also affected. It’s hard to know where to start, so I’ll just go with the first one chronologically, which is Walking the Edge, a big project that is a collaboration between Culture Push and Works on Water (two small artist-run organizations that I co-founded and also co-direct) and the Department of City Planning. Works on Water supports work by artists who are working with water as site and material in response to the climate crisis and the changes in urban landscapes. Culture Push supports artists that work at the nexus of social justice, civic engagement, and artistic practice. Together, the two orgs are working with the Waterfront and Open Spaces Division of the NYC Department of City Planning to create a durational artwork that invites everybody to walk all 520 miles of New York City’s coastline (yes there are 520 miles of NYC coastline!). That walk was supposed to start on May 1 (520 in 5/20, get it?) and continue for 24 hours a day until the whole coast was covered. So, yeah. We are adjusting. It’s interesting, actually, and not entirely bad, to slow down and reconsider. Briefly, tell me about how you got involved in the arts and in your particular practice. I have been involved in the arts since birth--my father was a poet and multi-media artist, my mother is a visual artist, and I grew up in the “avant-garde” arts ferment of the 1970s. I always made all kinds of art from the time I was a tiny child, and I never stopped. But me as someone who was going to be an artist, that started in college. I loved making visual art and playing music and dancing and performing, but my ambition, from middle school on, was to be a biochemist and save the world. [I’m not sure that biochemistry can “save the world,” but it’s pretty important right now, and it did help me get a job working on one of our other pandemics, HIV.] But then, while I was at Wesleyan University for undergrad, I started composing dances and improvising, and then I was hooked. I was fascinated by composition in time, and by the small society we make every time we make a dance together. That fascination has mutated, and now I make small societies that become legal entities, or ongoing conceptual works that invite people to consider their place in the world, and collaborate on how to change it. In a more specific way, what are you practicing? And what are you envisioning?
This is a funny question for me--hard to answer! I often feel just like I’m practicing--life. Which means to me--trying to fully embody the principles I believe in. It’s a constant struggle, and it’s hard to feel like I’m doing it right, but I think that’s what I’ve been groping towards for most of my adult professional life. That manifests now in these experimental organizations, where a concept can become its own “person.” I call it the performance of institution, and I am sure it’s rooted in my time as a dance artist, where survival depended on marketing your self and your vision as a kind of product or entity. By performing as an institution, me and my collaborators have been able to leverage the power of the legal entity to support people and ideas that haven’t been supported by mainstream arts institutions (or anyone else) because of structural racism or sexism or xeno-, trans- and homophobia or capitalist values or or or…. . How does your practice and your visioning align with what you most care about? I’m going to answer this question with a story about the past. In my early 30s, I felt an urgent need to be explicit about my political and moral obsessions and values, so I made a fairly radical shift in my practice. First, I started a program facilitating performance made by New York City youth from public high schools and alternative education programs, to counter the prevailing media narratives around urban youth of color in the 1990s. Then I made a big piece about war that took place on a docked ferryboat. Then I collaborated on a piece about the collision between biology, history, and race in the development of the US. Gradually, however, it became clear to me that if I really wanted to shift the structures of inequity that dominated my society, I would have to build new models, so I initiated Culture Push, in collaboration with Arturo Vidich and Aki Sasamoto, two other multidisciplinary artists, as an experiment in building an institution. This process taught me about using the principles of openness, improvisation, resourcefulness, and fierce conviction that I had learned from performance and activism to create new structures. I continue to refine this methodology in several different venues. How does your practice function within the world we have now? I want to be an agent of change and transformation through supporting and nurturing others. There are so many beautiful ideas in the world that have been suppressed or dismissed, and seeing those ideas come alive, and seeing the people behind those ideas thrive, is a real source of joy for me. I also want to use art and imagination to shine a light on important issues, whether in work I initiate or in the work that others initiate. Right now (RIGHT now, in the midst of this pandemic) there are pressing issues of access--to health care, to work with dignity, to housing--that have suddenly become even more glaringly obvious than they already were, and the intensity of the needs exposed is daunting. I’m not sure how I will respond personally (I am slow--I feel shame for my slowness, but I’m old enough to know that’s who I am), but in the meantime I will try to support all the people who have been able to respond immediately and with amazing innovation and imagination. Briefly share one self-care tip that has special meaning to you now. Cooking. The sensual satisfaction and immediate gratification of cooking a good meal is key right now. I feel so incredibly lucky that I have access to good food, and that I can prepare meals for my family. It’s a lot like making a performance--you spend an hour or so preparing something, and then it’s gone, eaten up in a flash, transformed from object to energy.

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DISCLAIMER: In addition to my work on InfiniteBody, I serve as Senior Curatorial Director of Gibney. The postings on this site are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views, strategies or opinions of Gibney.

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Thursday, March 26, 2015

On the nature of climate change: Karole Armitage at AMNH

Two scenes from On the Nature of Things by Karole Armitage
(photos: Julieta Cervantes)

Elizabeth Kolbert wrote in Field Notes From A Catastrophe, "It may seem impossible to imagine that a technologically advanced society could choose, in essence, to destroy itself, but that is what we are now in the process of doing.

Problems such as climate disruption, toxification of Earth, loss of biodiversity, loss of ecosystem services are solveable, but to do so human behavior must be basically altered.
In the twenty-first century we have created a civilization that is way out of step with the realities of our planet. 
--Paul Ehrlich, from text for On the Nature of Things

So our beloved American Museum of Natural History has funding from that climate change-denying Koch brother (click here). Well, last night's world premiere of On the Nature of Things, staged beneath the museum's iconic blue whale, felt like nothing short of an exorcism.

Choreographer Karole Armitage (Armitage Gone! Dance) filled Milstein Hall of Ocean Life with a multi-generational corps, including dancers from Manhattan Youth Ballet, as Stanford biologist Paul Ehrlich, performing live narration, laid down the science in layperson's terms. The message? Uncompromising: Climate is changing, we are responsible for it, and we are responsible for it.

And, no, I'm not merely repeating myself. We did it. Now we have to fix it.

Armitage and Ehrlich--a longtime friend of the choreographer's father, a biologist--fervently agree that the only way to engage most people with the complex science around climate and environment is through the heart, hence through the power of the arts. In that light, On the Nature of Things serves more as a supportive underscore, I think, than as educator or motivator--at least, up there on Manhattan's Upper West Side. The piece was made for the museum, but imagine the public service Armitage could do by touring it around the heartland and southlands before our next elections.

As a visual phenomenon, the work benefits, first, from its unique setting which places its uniformly-costumed dancers--a subliminal message in that coral color scheme?--in the midst of the museum's displays, encircled by onlookers there and on balconies. Armitage handles the hall's broad open floor with dramatic force, her deployment of dancers suggesting rising population, mounting tensions, collisions, competition for space and dominance. Her movement technique--a fusion of modern and ballet, meticulous, often showy--can hold the eye without necessarily spelling out matters spoken by Dr. Ehrlich. Unfortunately, the narration-dance overlay does not work. Luckily, I had the script and time to read it beforehand.

One wonders at the presence of a few dancers en pointe, especially when they use those pointe shoes for the clever but weirdly distracting trick of a quick slip across the floor. The dancers, though, are all in. They accomplish a handsome, coherent performance culminating in the choreographer's vision of serenity, hope and healing that we have yet to earn.

On the Nature of Things will continue with performances tonight and tomorrow at 7pm. For information and tickets, click here.

American Museum of Natural History
Central Park West and 79th Street, Manhattan
(Enter at 79th Street underneath staircase.)
(map/directions)

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Other American Museum of Natural History presentations of interest:


Our Earth’s Future: One-Day Course
Saturday, April 11, 9am–4pm
Free with application, available on amnh.org

In a special one-day offering, Dr. Debra Tillinger will lead an in-depth exploration of the science of the Arctic and Antarctic regions, and how changes in these two critical areas of Earth indicate and catalyze the impacts of climate change. Participants will hear from guest speakers on the geology, biology, and cultures of these beautiful and fragile parts of the world. They will also engage in discussions, take Museum hall tours, and enjoy a challenging game of geopolitics—SMARTIC, in which players must enact real-life solutions to the potential large-scale problems anticipated by the impact of climate change in the polar regions. Refreshments will be served.

Milstein Science Series: Sea Turtles
Sunday, May 3, 11am–4:30pm 
Free for Members or with Museum admission

Sea turtles are simply astounding! They lived alongside dinosaurs 150 million years ago, and still survive today. Playing a crucial role in our oceans’ ecosystems, this incredible animal group is now endangered due to climate change, poaching, habitat destruction, and accidental capture in fishing gear. Learn more about these resilient aquatic creatures and the conservation efforts in place to protect them with Eleanor Sterling, Chief Conservation Scientist, Center for Biodiversity & Conservation at the American Museum of Natural History; Wallace J. Nichols, scientist and New York Times-bestselling author of Blue Mind; and Michael Coyne, executive director of seaturtle.org. The event includes a live music performance by Bash the Trash, playing instruments made out of reused and repurposed materials.

For additional information, call 212-769-5100 or visit the Museum’s website at amnh.org.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

"We have life because water is bent."

As a writer, I’m interested in the intersection between poetry and storytelling. How and when does an act of human speech become like a poem? How do poetry and storytelling come together and diverge?
--Devi Lockwood, One Bike, One Year
Read more at:

Release (and Dreams of a Performance)
by Devi LockwoodOne Bike, One Year, January 16, 2015

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Artist collective's pop-up museum takes on Koch brothers on climate change

Ahead of the People's Climate March, Creative Time Reports Editor Marisa Mazria Katz speaks with the artist collective Not An Alternative about their Natural History Museum, a new project that confronts the unsavory influence of corporate cash on science institutions.
Clearing the Air: Artists Take on Corporate Influence in Natural History Museums
by Marisa Mazria Katz and Not An Alternative, Creative Time Reports, September 2, 2014
"The Natural History Museum" is a new museum that offers exhibitions, expeditions, educational workshops and public programming. Unlike traditional natural museums, it makes a point to include and highlight the social and political forces that shape nature.
Grand Opening 
Saturday, September 13
The Queens Museum

For more information, click here.


Wednesday, August 27, 2014

USDAC: Imagine and activate the arts for justice

U.S. Department of Arts and Culture

The U.S. Department of Arts and Culture (USDAC)* is the nation's newest people-powered department, founded on the truth that art and culture are our most powerful and under-tapped resources for social change. Radically inclusive, useful and sustainable, and vibrantly playful, the USDAC aims to spark a grassroots, creative change movement, engaging millions in performing and creating a world rooted in empathy, equity, and social imagination.
CALL TO ACTION: The USDAC calls on all artists and creative activists to use our gifts for peace and justice, sharing images, performances, experiences, writings, and other works of art that raise awareness, build connection, cultivate empathy, and inspire action.
The murder of Michael Brown (and Eric Garner, Renisha McBride, Jonathan Ferrell, Jordan Davis, Sean Bell, Trayvon Martin, Oscar Grant, and so many others) and the suppression of basic rights in Ferguson, MO (and so many other places) compel us to ask these questions:
Who are we as a people?
What do we stand for?
How do we want to be remembered?
As a culture of punishment? Or a culture that values every human life, promoting true public safety grounded in justice and love?
You are invited to answer USDAC's call for action on equity and justice as a Citizen Artist. Click here for more information on this initiative and how you can participate.

(*Not an actual US federal department...and more's the pity.)

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Post-Sandy: Disaster and possibility: New York's art world in recovery


A Climate Change in the Art World?

The art community is digging out, drying off, counting its losses, helping its neighbors--and starting to prepare for the hurricanes of the future.

by Robin Cembalest, ARTNews, November 13, 2012 (print: January 2013)

Monday, October 4, 2010

Science foundation funds theater project

Science Foundation Backs Climate-Change Play
by Rachel Lee Harris, The New York Times, October 3, 2010

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