Responding to Climate Change at Middlebury College: "Hot and Cold" and "Hope Wheels" for 50th Anniversary of US's Oldest Environmental Studies Program
It was an honor to be invited to assist in the celebration of Middlebury College’s 50th anniversary of its Environmental Studies Program by doing two Art of Sustainability projects on October 1st and 2nd, featured below, with testimonials at right.
I hope you enjoy this edition of my newsletter. If you like what you see, I encourage you or your school, organization or business to invite me to lead a workshop or give a talk. These can focus on expressive mask making, reconnecting to nature, stilt walking, A Little Farm Story and much more. For others, I encourage you to consider buying one of my art pieces - paintings and sculptures - or my book, A Little Farm Story.
Warmly,

Jay Mead
|
|
|
Hot and Cold
“Hot and Cold” is the latest iteration of a body of work that is responding to climate change. How is our civilization dealing with climate change? Perhaps “Hot and Cold” is a good way of thinking about it. Making climate change a political issue and then denying that it is currently being caused by our actions is one way some people are choosing to live with this question. Conversely many others are starting to reconsider everything, from the way we grow food, to where we live, to national security and indeed all systems that sustain life as we know it. It is with this latter train of thought that I am aligned and out of which this project grows.
Here are some of the questions this piece is meditating on: Do we adapt to the changes? Will we mitigate by taking radical actions and succeed in averting a total disaster? How attached are we to the status quo? Can we live without wildness? What are we leaving for others? How do we address the suffering of most of the world’s people and living things? Will technology save us? Can we make sustainability fun?
I chose the complements orange (hot) and blue (cold) because they are opposites on the color wheel. The tension of a hot orb surrounding a cold and defined, but diffuse core is intended to be alarming and - like a target - catches our attention. I am using saplings, plywood, and dimensional lumber because I am attracted to the accessibility of these materials. The organic lines of the saplings are a feature I find particularly interesting. I like how each sapling is unique yet as a whole the ensemble reads as a precise circle. I have been using saplings in my pieces because they are a renewable material. These saplings are striped or moose maple. They came from a friend’s land that appreciated the thinning I did in selecting them.
Visit my Explorations Blog to read the full article and to leave a comment.
|
|
Hope Wheels
The “Hope Wheels” are a simple way for folks to express what they love about what exists here and now. Perhaps by taking time to think about what one holds most dear, there is a chance that someone may be called to fight for the survival of that thing. Passersby - including many Middlebury students, faculty, staff and community members - were invited to write or draw on these strips of cloth the names of animals, plants, habitats, cultures, ecosystems, bodies of water, land forms, seasonal features, loved ones, shelter, food, heath, or anything else they valued about the community of life. In the same way that Buddhist Prayer Wheels spin prayers and good thoughts over the land, these Hope Wheels can be used in a similar way. They also can be used as processional elements in demonstrations or celebrations.
Visit my Explorations Blog to read the full article and to leave a comment.
|
Painting for Sale
The Red Line (detail) is made of acrylic, leaves and map on plexiglass. It is 7" x 26" in size.
|
Painting for Sale
Yellow Sound (detail) is made of acrylic, leaves and map on plexiglass. It is 6" x 26" in size.
Contact me at jaywmead@gmail.com or 1-802-369-9137 to purchase these or other paintings.
|
|
|
|