Expressions of Intent for International Polar Year 2007-2008 Activities

Expression of Interest Details


PROPOSAL INFORMATION

(ID No: 1203)

Artist in Residence at the Upernavik Museum working on paintings of the arctic landscape  (Arctic Paintings)

Outline
Paintings of the Arctic: 1.I will arrive in northwest Greenland on May 14 and will go to Ilullisat and Upernavik. 2. I hope to convey my sense of the arctic landscape there in the paintings that follow and will begin my project by making drawings and taking photographs on location. 3.The paintings will be done in oil on Mylar and on canvas with glaciers/ ice activity as their proposed subject. When possible, paintings will be done on location. An artist residency at the Upernavik Museum from mid May to mid June will greatly facilitate this process. 4. In appreciation for the museum’s hospitality I expect to give them a painting. 5.This plan in Greenland is part of an ongoing project, which began in Juneau, Alaska over eight years ago, when I embarked on a series of paintings at the Mendenhall Glacier. Following that I did paintings on the Ruth Glacier near Talkeetna. Last year I visited Svalbard and the Norwegian mainland and am currently working on ice paintings from that trip. 6.The paintings done in Greenland and from my trip to Norway will be exhibited at the Blue Mountain Gallery in New York City in March 08 and I will give a talk about this project during the exhibition. 7.I will also be looking for other venues for exhibits and hope to give other illustrated public talks about this latest journey, my interests and concerns. For further background, please see statement enclosed.

Theme(s)   Major Target
The current state of the polar environment
The polar regions as vantage points
  Education/Outreach and Communication

What significant advance(s) in relation to the IPY themes and targets can be anticipated from this project?
Outreach regarding qualities of the landscape, its beauty, current conditions, concerns

What international collaboration is involved in this project?
Only one to one: Artist from the USA with the Museum in Upernavik to learn from and offer art work to


FIELD ACTIVITY DETAILS

Geographical location(s) for the proposed field activities:
Northwest Greenland: vicinity of Ilullisat and Upernavik

Approximate timeframe(s) for proposed field activities:
Arctic: May 07 – June 07            
Antarctic: n/a

Significant facilities will be required for this project:
Logistical support will be the lodging and studio provided by the Upernavik Museum. The accommodations are not large enough to be shared.

Will the project leave a legacy of infrastructure?
No

How is it envisaged that the required logistic support will be secured?
Own support
Other sources of support

As stated above: residency at Upernavik Museum

Has the project been "endorsed" at a national or international level?
No - Only as part of the Polar Artists Group, which has members from different countries.


PROJECT MANAGEMENT AND STRUCTURE

Is the project a short-term expansion (over the IPY 2007-2008 timeframe) of an existing plan, programme or initiative or is it a new autonomous proposal?
Yes

This is a unique project, though one related to the Polar Artists Group which has registered with IPY

How will the project be organised and managed?
Self managed

What are the initial plans of the project for addressing the education, outreach and communication issues outlined in the Framework document?
Initial plans are an exhibition of the project at the Blue Mountain Gallery, 530 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10001. A talk will be given in conjunction with this exhibition.

What are the initial plans of the project to address data management issues (as outlined in the Framework document?
Data will be available via the Polar Artist Group and via my own outreach

How is it proposed to fund the project?
Self funded, except for logistical support mentioned above

Is there additional information you wish to provide?
MARCIA CLARK: Statement for POLAR ARTISTS GROUP and IPY Years ago, without having seen one, I was asked to paint a glacier. The results were not spectacular as I remember, but the project stirred my imagination. I read John Muir’s journals and saw how he was led from his discovery of glacial scrapings in the Sierra Nevada to the still active glaciers in Alaska, and I went to the Smithsonian to see the many sketches of icebergs that the Hudson River painter Frederic Church had done on a trip to Labrador in search of ice. It was years later that I arrived at Glacier Bay in Alaska, “discovered” by Muir in the late 1800s with the help of the Inuit. My next visit to Alaska took me over the glaciers of Denali to the Ruth Glacier, where I stayed in a small cabin for several days to do drawings and oil studies of the ice formations and the surrounding mountains. I returned the following year to continue the projects I had begun, one on a large canvas, which I carried up there in a mailing tube. In June 2006 an expedition cruise took me to Norway’s Svalbard Archipelego, and I visited Iceland’s spectacular Vatnajokul Glacier on my return. I’m working on paintings from these sites now, and in May 2007 I will go to Greenland to study the terrain for new projects in the vicinity of Ilullisat and Upernavik, sponsored by an artist residency at the Upernavik Museum. Last year, on the mainland in Norway, I was surprised to find most arms of glaciers I visited, stunted, suspended over bare rock. The year before, I had visited Twillingate in Newfoundland, one of Frederic Church’s destinations, and which until very recently, has been known for the continuous parade of icebergs collecting in its harbor. Though it was June/July, usually a good time to see them, I found not one bit of ice there. It is becoming quite clear, first hand, that the melting is not an accident of one particular season. I’m concerned about the changes I see, evidence of global warming, and I’m concerned about man’s part in this. My paintings are not political statements, but they do come out of my personal experience. They are from my own vantage point and express my values and feelings for places, and I bear witness as an artist. The pictures on this site were either painted on location, or inspired by the places I have been. Most are in oil, although I also work in other media such as pastel, and more recently in mixed media collage, and photo-collage. The work, usually panoramic in scope, often suggests movement as well as the spatial panorama. My first true awareness of nature in process rather than as fixed phenomena came from a time in the ‘70s spent working at the Mount Washington Observatory, a weather station and research center at the summit of the northeast’s tallest mountain. For this I’m indebted to the Chief Observer, Guy Gosselin, who hired me while I was still a graduate student, to work with him on historical displays for their museum, which was still in its planning stages. My projects included the glacier painting mentioned above. Walking the mountains as the displays evolved, unlocked the secret that we were in but a moment of their existence. The Presidential Range makes its own weather and walking up through the forests to the alpine tundra was like travel into the far north, with dramatic changes in vegetation and temperature. One could pass from a hot summer day into a snowstorm, as I did on my first visit there. We were up above treeline where so much bare rock is exposed, rock spills in evidence, where snow falls in the summer and the winds blow powerfully enough to shake your soul. From the summit when the fog lifts one can see out to the ocean in Portland and out over distant mountains. Up there, life is fragile and the lichen and mosses, krumholtz and other plant life common to other alpine zones, take very long to grow. Thirty years later on Cape Spear in Newfoundland, I felt an exciting familiarity, and realized I was still on this same landmass, on the Appalachian range way out in the Atlantic. My focus is on the awe inspiring in nature, but I can’t help but be aware that I’m observing a threatened landscape. As I encounter problems of pollution and the melting of glacial ice, I also see that for better or for worse we are caught in and are creating our own history. Trying to understand my place in this changing panorama, I find myself like Muir and many others today, travelling to the ends of the earth.


PROPOSER DETAILS


Marcia Clarke





USA

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Other project members and their affiliation

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