All the Light Below at Cove Street Arts Portland Maine April 2022

ALL THE LIGHT BELOW

The Ocean has been a primary source of study and inspiration and is a foundational element in my practice. In early 2021 after reaching out to Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, I was paired with Dr. Beth Orcutt, a senior research scientist who studies microbial life in the deep sea.  Our first meetings took place over zoom while I was an artist in residence at Ellis Beauregard Foundation. I spent that residency meeting with Beth, studying the deep-sea footage and learning about the potentially devastating impacts of deep-sea mining on our ecosystem.  I explored these ideas in the studio with painting and drawing to combine the science I was learning with the emotional responses I felt. The gorgeously sublime and virtually unmapped areas that Beth was showing me elicited feelings of reverence, awe, and a deep desire to protect such a primordial and sublimely beautiful place.

Throughout this past year, Beth and I have continued our meetings in person in the studio and at the lab. Beth has been traveling to  Luʻuaeaahikiikapapakū - Ancient Volcanoes in Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument – a natural preserve in Hawaii to study the deep sea. Her approach to these areas is intentional and considered. I have learned much about the many levels of understanding that go into the research and am moved by the stories Beth intentionally engages with.

‘The sea affects every aspect of human life-generating oxygen, moderating climate, feeding us, providing source material for medicines, affecting weather patterns, etc. But it is also, according to a current debate in scientific circles, possibly the origin of life. The “primordial soup” theory (that we emerged as organisms generated in swamps) is now being challenged by the hypothesis that human life arose from hydrothermal vents deep in the ocean….

…Abstraction serves these paintings well because our understanding of life at these depths can never be complete. The riddle at the center of it all – how life emerges from the boiling environment of the vents – remains indecipherable and mysterious; in a word, abstract.’- Jorge Arango.

 

Bigelow Laboratories Art /Science initiative allows artists and scientists to meet and share ideas. We also see our collaboration as a means to bring awareness to a larger audience and create a space to emotionally and philosophically engage with scientific research. The impacts of deep-sea mining are just now being explored, and the devastation could be irreparable. The violence of our mining practices should be brought to light and understood before we surge ahead with more destruction. Ironically, many of our solutions to fossil fuels require minerals and metals found in the deep sea. It is essential for us to understand the impacts of mining these resources before disturbing this vital ecosystem.

 

All The Light Below is the second group of works devoted to this collaboration, exploring the devasting impacts of mining the deep sea and the importance of conserving this mysterious, sublime, and primordial place. These luminous and sublime paintings are inspired by research and collaboration with Beth Orcutt, Senior Research Scientist at Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Science, who studies microbial life in deep-sea environments and the effects of deep-sea mining on the ocean’s ecosystems. These paintings are informed by these sublime environments, mysterious life forms, uncharted territories, and conversations about the risks of human impact in these rarely seen primordial places.