International Artists Emphasize Endangered Species At Whatcom Museum in Bellingham
[caption id="attachment_68348" align="aligncenter" width="500"] One of 80 works in Endangered Species: Artists on the Front Line of Biodiversity at the Whatcom Museum in Bellingham, WA. Jason deCaires Taylor. British, b. 1974. Photograph of Vicissitudes, Grenada, West Indies, 2011. Courtesy of the artist.[/caption]
More than five years in the making, the new art exhibition, Endangered Species: Artists on the Front Line of Biodiversity, at the Whatcom Museum in Bellingham, WA is a masterful collection of more than 80 works of art, from rare books, sculpture and exquisite paintings to photography and cutting edge video, that span the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries.
The captivating exhibition runs September 8, 2018 to January 6, 2019 at Whatcom Museum's Lightcatcher Building. The museum also has 20 related programs planned for this exhibit including tours with collection's Curator Dr. Barbara Matilsky. This exhibit integrates art history, the natural sciences, and environmental conservation, displaying work by contemporary artists alongside their counterparts from the nineteenth century. It's focus is more timely than ever in the context of climate change, continuing habitat loss, pollution, national and global politics and economic globalization.
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Nick Brandt, British, b. 1964. Line of Rangers Holding the Tusks of Elephants Killed at the Hands of Man, Amboseli, from Across the Ravaged Land, 2011. Archival pigment print, 44 x 78 in. Courtesy of the artist.[/caption]
I had the pleasure and privilege of attending the Whatcom Museum Members preview the day before the exhibition opening where I was able to meet and talk with Dr. Matilsky as well as three of the featured artists.
Meaning, Emotion and Inspiration
A sequel exhibition to and inspired by Whatcom Museum's Vanishing Ice: Alpine and Polar Landscapes in Art (2013–14), Endangered Species is a moving collection of pieces from around the world. As you might expect, the collection is...well...diverse. Matilsky has brought together works representing every continent, an array of species and habitats, and a variety of media. Rare books and paintings are displayed near modern art sculpture of a coral reef on the sea floor, National Geographic photography, modern Native American art and Andy Warhol. You would have to spend years traveling the world to see each of the pieces in this collection making this a once-in-a-lifetime collection that exposes its audience to works they would otherwise never see. [caption id="attachment_68342" align="aligncenter" width="500"]
Dallas, Texas, 2011, from Hunters, 2013. Chromogenic print, 54 x 34 in. Courtesy of the artist.[/caption] The exhibition catalog describes it well, "The splendor and vulnerability of our planet is magnificently portrayed in the telling of touching and fascinating stories around several basic themes: the beauty and immensity of Earth’s biodiversity, natural extinctions, human-influenced extinctions, endangered species, trophy hunting, and of course, global warming." During Dr. Matilsky's introduction she acknowledged that the works both celebrate the wonder and beauty of our planet's biodiversity, while acknowledging that many are in peril or have been lost. [caption id="attachment_68344" align="aligncenter" width="500"]


Meeting the Artists
With more than 80 pieces in the collection, I can only scratch the surface of this exhibit. You'll have to go see them all for yourself. But I had the deep pleasure of meeting three of the artists. Illustrator David W. Miller had the distinct honor of being the preparator of the exhibit, the person who helps set up each piece, on a custom made display or wall hanging. His own work, Quetzalcoatlus (2002), an oil and acrylic was also on display. Miller told me that he worked for many years creating illustrations of this and other extinct dinosaurs in prehistoric landscapes for natural history museums. His work highlights humanities efforts to document and reconstruct the past from fossil records as well as the ever-evolving interpretation of it as we learn more over time. Miller's works appear in the Smithsonian Institution, the American Museum of Natural History, and Yale University's Peabody Museum. [caption id="attachment_68347" align="aligncenter" width="380"]
Courtesy of the New York State Museum, Albany.[/caption] I very much enjoyed meeting American Madeline von Foerster, who hand delivered one of two pieces to the collection from her home in Cologne, Germany. Reliquary for Rabbs' Frog (2018) commemorates the extinction of the Rabbs' fringe limbed treefrog. Her painting is symbolic and was based on the last specimen that died at the Atlanta Botanical Garden on September 26, 2016. The frog sits in an elaborate container of metal and glass, its style incorporates elements of German architecture. The container is held carefully by a pair of gloved hands, she said to symbolize our laboratory-like separation from the animal. I couldn't help but tear up seeing this piece. We often think of extinctions as something that happened somewhere else a long time ago. Not here. Not now. But here we are in 2018, still losing an estimated 200 to 2000 species to extinction each year. [caption id="attachment_68349" align="aligncenter" width="500"]


Oil and egg tempera on panel, 20 x 16 in. Collection of John Brusger.[/caption] Both paintings, along with many of her other works, use a five century-old mixed technique of oil and egg tempera, developed by the Flemish Renaissance Masters. The subject of her works are entirely modern, exploring the human relationship to nature with such themes as deforestation, wildlife trafficking, and human-caused extinction. I also had the pleasure of meeting Port Townsend, WA artist Michael J. Felber. At first I mistook his colored pencil of a polar bear, Arctic Father (2017) for a photograph because it was so detailed and realistic. Felber meticulously based his drawing on bears that he photographed while on a cruise in Svalbard and Greenland, this one representing bear Number 14 observed in June 2016. Unlike the way these bears have been portrayed in the past, as viscous wild animals, Felber's bear is serene. Felber communicated with the Norwegian Polar Institute’s monitoring project to share and obtain more information about this bear and to support their efforts to monitor impacts of climate change on the populations. Felber and I discussed his detailed use of the black and gray color pallet as well as how you create depth in a 'white' landscape. Felber connected the bear directly to the ice upon which it is delicately perched.
About Curator Dr. Barbara Matilsky
Endangered Species isn't Dr. Matilsky's first foray into the subject area. She also curated Whatcom Museum's Vanishing Ice: Alpine and Polar Landscapes in Art (2013–14). Prior to her nine years with Whatcom Museum, Dr. Matilsky was Curator of Exhibitions at Ackland Art Museum, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and curator at the Queens Museum of Art, New York City, where she organized the traveling exhibition, Fragile Ecologies: Contemporary Artists' Interpretations and Solutions (1992). [caption id="attachment_68350" align="aligncenter" width="500"]


1909. Oil on canvas, 27½ x 39½ in. Courtesy of the American Museum of Natural History, New York.[/caption] I enjoyed this so much that I'll be heading back with my teenagers. I noticed other children of all ages got something different out of the exhibit. As I wandered through the collection, I could hear the deep conversations among visitors, about the status of species and their habitats, global politics and economics and the artists themselves. I'll look forward to those conversations with my teens. Plan your visit now to catch this bold and thought-provoking collection of exquisite work before January 6, 2019. Endangered Species also provides hope for the future. According to the catalog, "Artists themselves are not only creating works that draw attention to environmental problems, but they are also designing projects that help restore habitats. It is our fervent hope that visitors will be inspired and take notice of these positive changes so that they feel empowered, even if in small ways, to help make a difference." Whatcom Museum Lightcatcher Wednesday - Sunday, noon - 5 p.m. 250 Flora Street, Bellingham, WA 98225 360.778.8930 www.whatcommuseum.org