ArtLAB Residency
Mountain Lake Biological Station,
Pembroke, Virginia
Summer 2015
I had the great fortune to
spend 2 weeks as an artist in residence at the Mountain Lake Biological Station
on top of Saltpond Mountain in the southern Appalachians in Virginia as part of
the ArtLAB Residency program. The station is surrounded by incredible forestland
with many interesting habitats for studies in field ecology. It sits right on
the Continental Divide, right between the Atlantic and Mississippi drainage
system.
The ArtLAB Residency has been going now for three years. This year, the crew consisted of four other artists and five undergraduate art students from the University of Virginia. We had the great fortune of sharing the station and many meals with biologists from all over the country. A true gathering of curious minds.
I decided to focus my time
there building on a collaboration I am currently doing with Christian Gentry, a
composer who uses found sounds to build compositions with. Using his approach, but focusing on
weather, I spend most of my time listening and creating sketched storyboards
that track the sounds I was hearing.
This ended up in a series of drawings I am currently working on that
track rain and wind movements across the station – based not on a
meteorological instrument, but on my own ears and sense of direction.
The most important lesson I
learned is how hard it is to summarize a sound into a visual mark. Working very
quickly, I had to find a short hand system of marks to notate the direction,
quality, resonance and pitch of the sounds I was hearing. The ear can pick up
nuances and layers that the visual mark just can’t tab into. In that perhaps
obvious realization lies the potential for many artistic explorations I am
eager to embark on.
Mountain Labe Biological
Station: www.mlbs.org
ArtLAB Residency: mlbs.org/ArtLab
My sleeping quarters |
The studio |
The weather station |
Rain storm - July 12th, 8:01pm-8:05pm |
Rain storm - July 12th, 8:06pm - 8:10pm |
Wind movements - July 13, 11:43am-11:47am |