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The Lancaster Museum of Art and History (MOAH) se complace en anunciar Imprints, una exposición que interroga el uso de la tierra en California, los derechos del agua y el consumo de recursos naturales, a menudo a un ritmo mayor del que puede ser repuesto. Imprints incluye exposiciones individuales de seis artistas: Ann Diener, Charles Hood, Debra Scacco, Serena JV Elston, Sonja Schenk y Terry Arena. La exposición estará en exhibición desde el sábado 11 de mayo de 2024 hasta el domingo 11 de agosto de 2024.

 

En el primer piso, The Invented Land de Ann Diener explora la transformación de la tierra en el Valle Central de California, de granjas familiares a la agricultura industrial. En el atrio, Light for the Sun II de Sonja Schenk muestra cómo los gestos simbólicos, por pequeños que sean, pueden ayudar a concienciar sobre los problemas medioambientales. La galería Moore Family Trust exhibe el trabajo de Terry Arena, Natural Capital, que profundiza en la crítica de la comercialización de los recursos naturales renovables y no renovables del medio ambiente. En el segundo piso, la galería norte y la parte superior de las escaleras presentan la instalación fotográfica Under/Water de Charles Hood, que considera las declaraciones visuales y políticas del acueducto de Los Ángeles de 400 millas de largo. La galería Bozigian Family presenta obras de Debra Scacco. Misplaced Rain aborda el deseo humano de controlar la naturaleza en un esfuerzo por construir capital y expansión. En la Jewel Box se encuentran las piezas de Serena JV Elston, que critican las ideologías coloniales y occidentales, fomentando conversaciones más amplias sobre las formas en que estas ideologías permiten la explotación de la tierra y sus recursos.

EXPOSICIONES INDIVIDUALES DE IMPRINTS

Terry Arena

Natural Capital

Once considered a “ghost lake” in California, the torrential downpour of rain experienced in 2023 has resurrected bodies of water like Tulare Lake. It was considered one of the largest freshwater bodies west of the Mississippi before it would be depleted of its water in the 19th century through the creation of canals, dams, and ditches that would divert water from the region for agriculture. Lucrative crops like pistachios are planted on thousands of acres of the lakebed.

Ann Diener

The Invented Land

As a fourth-generation descendant of a Southern California farming family, Ann Diener has a deep connection to the land and is fascinated with its continual state of change. Several years ago, while visiting her late grandparents’ farm, she was struck by how abruptly and significantly this land had changed. No longer was she able to recognize her old haunts or familiar landmarks; the crops and trees were gone, the roads were reconfigured, and fertile farmland was covered in a shroud of industrial farming operations.

Serena JV Elston

Ancient Futurism

Artist Serena JV Elston is a transdisciplinary sculptor contemplating the body and its relationship to structures of power like patriarchy, capitalism, and gender. Her research-based practice explores ecology, posthumanism, disability, and embodiment through a post-colonial lens — a historical period or state of affairs representing the aftermath of Western colonialism. Elston critiques the institutional preservation of Western civilization.

Charles Hood

Under/Water

Amongst his twenty published books and over eight-hundred photographs, artist and author Charles Hood has focused much of his attention on wildlife and nature. He has traveled globally, documenting aspects such as resource allocation, regional fauna, and the evolution of natural landscapes. Hood’s work brings attention to both the political and environmental nuances of these varied regions in order understand how these locales are shaped and still constantly evolving.

Debra Scacco

Misplaced Rain

Artist and curator, Debra Scacco, questions how value is prioritized. Common threads of mapping and storytelling are present throughout her artistic practice. Working closely with cartographers, historians, activists, and scientists, Scacco studies the lines that direct everyday life, including boundaries drawn by policy, infrastructure, and societal perception.

Sonja Schenk

Light for the Sun II

The intersection of the natural world and humankind is key to Sonja Schenk’s artistic practice, which explores this convergence through a variety of forms: painting, sculpture, installation, and time-based media. She is interested in geography, anthropology, the future of humanity and how these elements reflect on modern life. Much of Schenk’s work is site specific, utilizing research of the area to create individualized projects that in her words, “fit[s] a place.”

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Para obtener información sobre This Valley Is Sacred: The Ancestors Are Speaking, por favor haga clic en el botón a continuación.

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