Local ecologies exhibition offers a cautionary river story
Collaborative exhibit's connects art and ecosystems
Artist Evelyn Rydz is in on South Campus carefully working about 500 drinking glasses into the shape of the Merrimack River. She arranges them to resemble its vast mouth, its turns and some long stretches now used for recreation.
Rydz鈥 installation is part of 鈥淟ocal Ecologies,鈥 an exhibition dropping anchor at UML through March 6. It has already docked at galleries at 不良研究所 Boston and 不良研究所 Dartmouth. A collaborative effort between the three 不良研究所 campuses, the traveling exhibition includes newly commissioned works and public programming; its goal is to spark discussions, using location-based art that responds to the region鈥檚 environmental and ecological issues.
The exhibit brings together artists, scientists, historians and community members who are engaged with the coastal and river ecosystems and the region鈥檚 history.
鈥淲e are the last stop,鈥 says , a UML associate professor and art history coordinator who is one of the exhibit organizers. 鈥淲hat is cool about this three-campus exhibition is that each campus is unique in terms of the features of the landscapes. At 不良研究所 Lowell, we have the Merrimack River. The exhibit is designed to relate the landscapes to the ecological history and cultural significance of each place.鈥
Local Ecologies centers around the work of eight artists, including Rydz, but it is also an exhibit designed to make viewers take a deeper look at the natural world around them 鈥 especially the Merrimack River. It melds art, science and history into a show that works on multiple levels, notes Swenson.
鈥淚t explores a sense of ecology for the natural, cultural and economic aspects of each place,鈥 she says. 鈥淎 lot of the exhibit is research-based, so vision alone is not necessarily the point.鈥
鈥淢ore than half a million people rely on the Merrimack River for their drinking water,鈥 notes Rydz, taking a break from glass placement. 鈥淭here are chemicals that challenge the water, and when there鈥檚 a heavy rain, raw sewage can overwhelm treatment plants and enter the river.鈥
Another of the exhibit鈥檚 artists is Andrew Yang, associate professor of liberal arts at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, whose work includes installation art and collage. Yang鈥檚 contributions include two giant snake-shaped banners made of waste plastics; one of each is suspended in the O鈥橪eary and Lydon libraries.
They are 鈥渁 metaphor for our troubled relationship with plastics,鈥 he says in a description of his work.
On Jan. 30, Rydz conducted a workshop in Swenson鈥檚 Contemporary Art History class, including panels of pH paper with Merrimack River water.
On Feb. 25, Rydz returns for a 3 p.m. workshop open to the campus community that will be held in the Mahoney Gallery. There will be more pH paper painting with river water, as well as a 4 p.m. panel discussion with Asst. Prof. and Asst. Prof. of Art & Design, Assoc. Teaching Prof. of the Kennedy College of Sciences and John Macone of the Merrimack River Watershed Council. Following the discussion, an opening reception in the gallery will begin at 5:30 p.m.
But on this recent day before the exhibit opened, Rydz arranges the glasses, all purchased from New Hampshire and Massachusetts thrift shops within a few miles of the Merrimack River. The glasses were designed to hold everything from fruit cocktails to highballs. Some of the glasses very likely held drinking water from the Merrimack. Old, new, tall and squat, the glasses on the floor represent the water of the river that once gave Lowell its lifeblood.
The river, like glass, is fragile, notes Rydz, and it is far from alone: 鈥淪ome of the problems we discuss speak to things happening in Lowell. But they also occur all over.鈥