E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation Partners with Art.Science.Gallery. for “In Danger (Or, You Should Really, Really Give a Shit)” Exhibition

Reportage Illustration.

Reportage Illustration of Times Square Ivory Crush © Guest Curator Jedidiah Dore

Art.Science.Gallery. is proud to announce the opening of In Danger (or, you should really, really give a shit), an exhibition that seeks to highlight the alarming rate of species decline and extinction worldwide, caused directly and indirectly by human impacts, and what we can do about it. Today’s extinction rate is estimated to be between 1,000 and 10,000 times higher than the natural extinction rate, with an estimated 150-200 species going extinct every 24 hours! This is the highest rate of biodiversity loss since the dinosaurs went extinct 65 million years ago, and is now being called the 6th Mass Extinction or the Anthropocene Extinction. The artworks in this exhibition tell the story of and conservation science about plants, animals and fungi on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, in the Critically Endangered (CE) category.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW AND PURCHASE ARTWORK FROM THIS EXHIBITION. 5% BENEFITS THE IUCN RED LIST OF THREATENED SPECIES.

This exhibit has three main goals:

1. Visualize the immediacy and magnitude of CE species issues

2. Remember extinct species through an altar of remembrance

3. Motivate visitors to take action through education, personal behavior, and advocacy.

In remembrance of extinct species, the exhibit will include an altar of remembrance / altar de muertos / ofrenda for species on the IUCN Red List Extinct in the Wild (EW) and Extinct (E) categories. Visitors and contributing artists will be invited to leave remembrances including photographs, important resources used by extinct species, or notable scientists or advocates that have spent their lives protecting or studying these animals.

Finally, we wish to empower visitors to help stop species extinctions through direct action, education and advocacy. To this end, the exhibit will include a participatory element in a postcard-writing station where visitors can create hand-written postcards with solutions and messages to political leaders that will be displayed during the exhibition and mailed en-masse to global leaders after the exhibit. Visitors will also be able to take away educational resources from our conservation partners outlining solutions and actions that anyone can take to help reduce biodiversity loss.

Special events during the exhibition include a short course entitled Conservation Biology, documentary film screenings, and talks by artists and scientists. The exhibition will also be the gallery’s featured exhibition for the 14th Annual EAST Austin Studio Tour, a self-guided tour of East Austin’s studios and creative spaces November 14-15 & 21-22, 2015.

5% from the sale of each artwork in the exhibition will benefit the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, to support their efforts to assess the conservation status of species, subspecies, varieties, and even selected subpopulations on a global scale for the past 50 years in order to highlight taxa threatened with extinction, and therefore promote their conservation.

GUEST CURATOR

Jedidiah Dore (New York, NY)

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

Natalie Bradford (Austin, TX)
Linda Byrne (New York, NY)
Palma Christian (Lisbon, Portugal)
Morgan Grasham (San Angelo, TX)
David Martinez (Austin, TX)
Tammy West (Sunset Valley, TX)

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

All events are held at Art.Science.Gallery. 916 Springdale Rd. Bldg 2 #102, Austin, TX

Additional listings and updates will be posted to www.artsciencegallery.eventbrite.com.

Opening Reception // Saturday, October 24, 2015 7-10pm
Donations accepted at the door or at www.artsciencegallery.eventbrite.com

The opening reception will feature special guests including many of the artists, and specialty cocktails featuring Austin-based distillery Genius Gin and Texas Coffee Traders.

Short Course: Conservation Biology // Wednesdays 6:30-8:30pm, Oct 28th – Nov 18th
Field Trip: Sunday, November 8th 12:00-6:00pm
Registration Required: $75 per student at www.artsciencegallery.com/labs

Learn the essentials of conservation biology through global and local conservation stories, including threats to biodiversity, solutions to conservation problems and protection of endangered species. Students must provide their own transportation. A supply/book list will be provided.

Curator talk with Jed Dore // Thursday, October 29th 7:00pm
Free, registration highly recommended at www.artsciencegallery.eventbrite.com

Guest curator and artist Jed Dore will discuss the use of reportage drawings to document important events and why it’s valuable for artists to illuminate pressing issues with their visual communication skills.

Creating Data and Information Visualizations // Tuesday, November 3rd 6:30-8:30pm
Registration Required: $30 per student at www.artsciencegallery.com/labs

Effective visuals play a critical role in communicating scientific data and complex ideas to a diverse audience. Taught by Nucleus Learning Network co-founders Sarah Morris and Emily Weerts, this interactive workshop, will help scientists and other researchers explore best practices, resources, and tools for creating data and information visualizations that tell compelling stories. Hands-on guidance during the workshop will assist attendees with current projects, so be sure to bring your computer and ongoing research.

Science talk with Dr. Hayley Gillespie // Saturday, November 7th 4:00pm
Endangered Species of Austin
Free, registration highly recommended at www.artsciencegallery.eventbrite.com

Get to know the endangered species of Austin and central Texas—from amphibians and reptiles to birds and cave invertebrates—and what we can do to protect them.

Hyperbolic Crochet // Sunday, November 8th 2:00-4:00pm
Registration Required: $35 per student at www.artsciencegallery.com/labs

As Euclidean geometry describes flat objects like tables and buildings, hyperbolic geometry describes frilly objects like lettuce and coral. For over a hundred years, mathematicians tried to create a good physical model of hyperbolic planes without much success. It wasn’t until 1997 that Dr. Daina Taimina produced a beautiful model using simple crochet. In this workshop with Dr. Fumiko Futamura, you’ll learn a little about hyperbolic geometry and how to crochet hyperbolic planes, which you can use to then create crocheted coral reefs, unique scarves and gorgeous abstract sculptures.

EAST Austin Studio Tour // Saturdays + Sundays, November 14-15 + 21-22 10am-6pm
A self-guided tour of Austin’s artist studios, galleries and creative spaces.

Small Business Saturday at Canopy // Saturday, November 28th 12pm-6pm
Enjoy special events, art demonstrations, giveaways and open studios from the small local businesses in the Canopy fine arts complex.

Closing Potluck & Social // Saturday, November 28, 2015 6-8pm
Free, no registration required

It is a gallery tradition to close each show with a community potluck! Free to attend. Guests are encouraged to bring a dish to share and are welcome to BYOB.

ABOUT THE ORGANIZERS
This show is organized and curated by Jed Dore, MFA and Hayley Gillespie, PhD. Hayley is founder/director of Art.Science.Gallery. (Austin, TX) and loves finding ways to engage the public in the sciences through the visual arts. Jed is an award-winning illustrator and founder/owner of Ink & Sword art and design studio (New York, NY). Both are inspired by the natural world and want to inspire the public to take action through education.

EXHIBITION PARTNERS
The Dumpster Project is many things: a re-imagining of home, a portable learning initiative, a sustainability conversation, a creative branch of a wider green campus initiatives at Huston-Tillotson University (HT), a historically black institution located in the heart of East Austin, and, most importantly, an innovative STEM education platform that uses the real-world challenge of transforming a trash dumpster into a tiny sustainable home to inspire learners of all ages.

The Center for Biological Diversity’s Endangered Species Condoms project was launched in 2009, and since then has distributed hundreds of thousands of free condoms across the United States. Wrapped in colorful, wildlife-themed packages (with artwork by Shawn DiCriscio), Endangered Species Condoms offer a fun, unique way to get people talking about the link between human population growth and the species extinction crisis.

The E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation’s mission is to expand knowledge and understanding of biodiversity in all its detail and complexity in order to best care for the living world. We work to promote the protection of biodiversity as a moral imperative and advocate that universal conservation should be one of humanity’s transcendent goals. We are dedicated, through exhibits such as this, to cultivating awareness and promoting understanding as a key foundation for citizen engagement and inspired care of our planet.

ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Natalie Bradford currently lives in Austin, pursuing a BFA in Studio Art at the University of Texas. Natalie utilizes printmaking and painting to examine parallels between feminine, human bodies and non-human animal bodies in relation to modes of production and consumption.

Linda Byrne is a visual artist and sculptor, exhibiting widely across the United States. Some shows include “Brimming On The Edge” in New York, and the well-received exhibition, “Nurturing Nature, Artists Engage the Environment” at galleries in New York and Pennsylvania. She has collaborated with poet and sound artist Maggie Dubris on two multimedia installations about our disappearing natural world. Over the years, Linda has received many artist residencies, awards and reviews.

Palma Christian is currently finishing a master’s degree in scientific illustration at the Instituto Superior de Educaçao e Ciencias in Lisbon. She is working on an illustrated osteological atlas of the Mediterranean monk seal, Monachus monachus. She holds a degree in philosophy and is interested in the relationship between art and science, art and scientific illustration.

Morgan Grasham is an internationally exhibited and collected artist making science-based art in rural Texas. She is known for surreal paintings of figures distorted with software, which visualizes concepts in astrophysics about the nature of time and black holes. Grasham is a mixed media artist working in oil on canvas, taxidermy, software, bronze, and more. She lives at the Chicken Farm Art Center in San Angelo with her ceramicist husband Eric Grasham.

David Martinez has a deep love for science and studied anthropology at the University of Texas. A folk artist based in scientific concepts, David is equally inspired by both physicists and legends, and his artwork seeks to create and illustrate a new mythology by drawing themes from modern and ancient sources. Currently, David is creating a series on Mother Nature, incorporating his own new mythologies alongside old ones in various portrayals of a personified Mother Nature.

Tammy West is influenced by the natural world, science and stories of culture and people sifted through her own musings and experiences growing up, traveling, planting trees, and helping the land. Her work takes many forms, including photography, painting, encaustic, earthworks and sculpture. She is currently inspired by the idea of “what is important” and “protection” and has several series of works addressing these concepts. Her professional and person life sits at the intersection between art, science and natural history.

SPONSORS

The opening reception will offer specialty cocktails featuring Austin-based distillery Genius Gin and beverages by Austin’s own Texas Coffee Traders.

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