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Izzy the Frog in Lumina Land

An
experiential exhibition by artist Joy Wulke, illuminated by Jamie
Burnett
of Luminous Environments with accompanying soundscape by Istvan
Peter
B’Racz, who named Izzy.
The exhibition will open June 10 and continue through
July 23, 2004. The museum will host a special reception for the
artist to celebrate the concurrent performance of Terrarium:
Izzy the Frog in Lumina Land to be held at the Ballpark at Harbor Yard.
The opening reception will be held
Thursday July 15
5:30 to 7:30pm in the gallery.
The installation of Izzy
the Frog in Lumina Land leads viewers/participants through a landscape of reflective ponds
of water, light, glass sculptures, bubbling water and a series
of illustrated stories. The illuminated text tells of the evolution
of our relationship with toads and frogs as symbols of transformation
though multicultural myths throughout time and as the species of
warning of universal ecological breakdown. Visitors are invited
to add to and make their own stories of transformation and ecological
enquiry on the scrolls of Izzy Life.
Izzy
the Frog in Lumina Land at the Housatonic Museum is intended
to reach a broad audience, including those who will
be participating
in Izzy Frog Festival at the Connecticut Beardsley
Zoo on June 27th and a multi media event at the Ballpark at Harbor Yard presenting
a full laser show, a symphony of amphibious sound, and an illuminated
pond full of frogs on July 16th and 17th. All programs offer
educational opportunities about our fragile ecology and a wondrous
and
unique experience for all ages to become inspired
through the artful and scientific frog to take a proactive role
in environmental stewardship.
The
exhibition is free and open to the public. Gallery summer hours
are Monday through Friday from 8;30am until 5:30pm and
Thursday
evenings until 7pm.
Ballpark:
Tickets for Terrarium : Izzy the Frog in Lumina Land can be purchased
through the toll-free
number 877-462-5837. General Admission is $6-12. www.bridgeportbluefish.com
Beardsley
Zoo: All programs are included in the price of Zoo Admission
$7.00 Adults; $5.00 Children 3-11, Seniors
and Handicapped;
Children
under 3 are free.
www.beardsleyzoo.org |
PLACES of the SPIRIT
SACRED SITES OF THE ADIRONDACKS

Book Available to Purchase
Opening Reception
Friday, June 11, 6:00 - 8:00 pm
Curated by Mara Miller
with images by Barry Lobdell, Heather MacLeod,
Romaine Orthwein and Shellburne Thurber
Places
of the Spirit is an exhibition
of the work of four photographers commissioned by the Lake Placid
Institute
for the Arts and Humanities during 2001, to visually respond to
sacred sites – churches, synagogues, burial grounds, and
landscape sites of spirituality – within the Adirondack region
in upstate New York.
Photographers
Heather MacLeod of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Romaine Orthwein of
New York City, Barry Lobdell of Saranac Lake, New York,
and Shellburne Thurber of
Boston, set off on their own to record and visually represent both the palpable
and unseen but “felt” signs of the spirituality of a people in a
specific community at a specific time. Each photographer has considerable experience
and exhibition history using the visual idiom of documentary photography to expand
multiple levels of reading and meaning for structures and sites within the natural
landscape.
In the Adirondacks as elsewhere, sacred objects and phenomena are set off from
ordinary, everyday life. The architecture and furnishing of churches and synagogues – right
down to the materials used to adorn and embellish inside and outside – like
the boundary markers of cemeteries, are signifiers for how a particular community
views and conducts its daily life and how it wishes to leave that life “behind.”
The
Adirondack landscape itself contributed greatly to additional
readings of what was “sacred” or truly spiritual. The wilderness for several
centuries stood for the sacred – for native American peoples as well as
for the people of the State of New York, who in the latter decades of the nineteenth
century brought such pressure to bear upon their legislator s that the Adirondack
Park was created and thus deemed “sacred.”
And
yet the people who settled the land had ambivalence towards this
sacred site. As Philip Terrie has written:
….the wilderness condition of the Adirondacks was also a source of hardship,
and every family’s goal was to secure a good living by eliminating at least
that part of the wilderness around their home and farm….When children
attended school or families worshipped in churches where the wilderness
had once prevailed,
this was, in the minds of Adirondackers, genuine progress.
Genuine
progress had helped settlements grow and become more worldly
(or profane), and one result has been the refurbishment or abandonment
of many
of the structures
and sites captured in these photographs.
Places
of the Spirit has been theorized from the perspectives of architecture,
history, and photographic representation, and, always, from within
the peculiar, or unique, context of the Adirondack landscape
itself. The
exhibition attempts
to question how faith or the sacred may be invested in a particular
site or structure, how it may be represented or indicated in
such a space,
and how
the photograph
as a memory of the past may shed light on issues of architecture, cultural
history and religion, and photography’s role in representing
each. The works in this exhibition offer up some record of the past,
of beauty, and of loss; such
recording may stimulate reflection, visual awareness, and perhaps even
action.
The
exhibition, of approximately 40 photographs, has been supported
by a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts; it is being
curated
by
Mara Miller,
an independent curator with a specialty and exhibition history in
the area of landscape representation; and it benefits also from
the historical
and
architectural expertise of Adirondack Architectural Heritage (AARCH)
Executive Director Steven
Engelhart, who serves as consultant to the project.
The
exhibition will open at the Housatonic Museum of Art in Bridgeport,
Connecticut (June 10 and run through July23, 2004). An opening
reception will be held
Friday, June 11 from 6-8 pm and the public is cordially invited
to attend. Gallery
hours are Monday through Friday: 830am -5:30pm and Thursday evening
until 7pm. For
additional information please call during galley hours.
About the Curator of
PLACES OF THE SPIRIT: SACRED SITES OF THE ADIRONDACKS
MARA
MILLER is an independent curator whose projects focus on contemporary
landscape photography and painting. A graduate of Sarah Lawrence College
and the M.A. program
at Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies, Miller has curated exhibitions
at the Center for Photography at Woodstock (catalogue essay in Photography
Quarterly), the Vernicos Center for the Arts in Piraeus, Greece (with
catalogue), and the
Museum of the Center for Curatorial Studies in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York,
as well as at the Lake Placid Center for the Arts. She has been a guest curator
in residence and Lecturer at the Banff Centre for the Arts (Canada), and
at the Parsons School of Art in New York City. Miller has also participated
as
curator
and essayist at Exit Art, New York City, and A Day in May exhibition on a
mountain top in Cold Spring, N.Y. She has served as consultant and collection
interpreter
for the Storm King Sculpture Center, Mountainville, N.Y., and for two years
has been curatorial consultant for a private collection of nineteenth and
twentieth-century art in New York. She has recently opened a gallery of contemporary
art, Miller/Geisler
Gallery, in the Chelsea area of New York City. |