| How
did you come to be interested in the Hudson River?
The Hudson is a unique cultural, social and environmental
symbol in this country. The river was the inspiration
for America's first native school of art. These artists
not only interpreted the grandeur of the river landscape
but sometimes portrayed the rapid environmental change
brought about by the industrial revolution. For example,
Thomas Cole, the founding father of the school, viewed
nature as sacred and often depicted environmental
degradation as a symbolic violent storm disrupting
an otherwise serene picture frame.
A century later, the environmental organization Scenic
Hudson led a battle against utility giant ConEd to
prevent them from building the world's largest pumped-storage
hydroelectric plant on Storm King Mountain. After
a seventeen-year legal struggle, Scenic Hudson won!
The lawsuit against ConEd became a legal landmark
because it established for the first time that citizens
have the right in federal court to intervene when
polluters or developers threaten public resources—this
in turn formed the basis for the National Environmental
Policy Act in 1969.
Finally as an artist who participates in ecological
research, I am interested in connecting people with
their local environments. Through these hybrid art
and biology projects, I hope to inspire people and
help them understand the need to protect ecosystems
both locally and globally. It is only natural for
me to research the Hudson; after all, it is part of
my home.
How long have you been observing and collecting
species from the Hudson?
Last summer, I taught at the University Settlement
Camp in Beacon, NY, where I started collecting and
doing simple scans with the campers. Since then, Pete
Warny and I have continued to survey fish, amphibians
and invertebrates at various locations. The specimens
for this exhibit come from a number of places. For
the Freshwater Tank, I collected darters, dace and
sunfish from tributaries near Beacon. In July, I collected
brackish species—silversides, Japanese shore
crabs and white perch with the girls from Wave Hill’s
Environmental Science Camp at Dyckman Pier in Inwood
Park. We’re borrowing saltwater species such
as horseshoe crabs from the AREAC lab at Brooklyn
College and from The River Project in lower Manhattan.
What happens to the animals after the exhibit?
The borrowed ones go back to where they came from
and the others are released.
You’ve scanned many species from the Hudson.
Why did you select these five species to include as
prints in the exhibit? What do they tell us about
the health of the river?
I have scanned dozens of species on a specialized,
super high-resolution scanner that creates a direct,
greatly magnified image. There are five uncommon and
potentially declining species displayed here—the
horsehair worm, the clearnose skate, the Atlantic
sturgeon, the striped killifish and the mudpuppy.
To my knowledge, only about dozen horsehair worms
have been found in the Hudson and now the mudpuppy
may be extinct from the river. Stan Sessions and I
have been experimenting with scanning techniques at
Hartwick College where both the sturgeon and the skate
were research specimens that we cleared and stained
prior to scanning. In the staining process, you can
see so much more of the fish.
Since many species are declining, the scans are a
way of recording species that are hard to find, as
well as a way of showing them as incredibly beautiful
creatures. They are declining due to habitat alteration
from human activity that has occurred continuously
along the Hudson since its settlement by Europeans.
As an artist, I am interested in demonstrating the
connection between habitat alteration and species
adaptation.
In this installation you present information in the
form of scanned images, aquariums filled with aquatic
life that comes from different points in the river,
and maps from the EPA’s Enviromapper system.
How do you think people will connect this information?
What do you hope they will take from the installation?
The maps and the fish tanks are a tangible way for
people to engage the river and become interested in
plants and animals that they wouldn’t typically
be able to see. I would like people to recognize that
the river is not separate from their daily lives;
it is not located somewhere else, but is integral
to the interconnected communities along the shoreline.
From the phytoplankton that helps to create the air
we breathe, to the fish that we eat, we’re connected
to the river. Anything that affects the health of
the river will eventually affect us. I would like
people to see that their daily activities have an
impact on the life of the river.
Your work blurs the boundaries of art,
technology and science. How do you see your role as
an artist?
I want to get people involved in their local environment.
Scientists don’t usually make their work accessible
to the public. As an artist, I take the scientific
research and make it available to people. Contemporary
artists should engage the public. It’s not enough
to work in the studio. I see the real world as a medium,
and art as a form of engagement.
|