sur le chemin: mary mattingly

Pour en revenir à SUR LA ROUTE: Notre galerie Tiffany est actuellement héberge travail par Mary Mattingly, gracieuseté de Robert Mann Gallery.


Le travail de Mattingly dans le spectacle des ruptures dans deux directions différentes: D’un côté,, il ya dystopique, science-fiction teinté de fiction, comme on le voit dans l’ Nomadographies: photographies construits d’un avenir entropique fantastique où le niveau des océans a augmenté, le terrain est soit incroyablement luxuriante ou hostile impassably, et les gens ont besoin de prendre la route et de la lumière de Voyage. (Au-dessous: photos de l’œuvre de Mary Mattingly dans SUR LA ROUTE à AAC.)


sur le chemin: mary mattingly SUR LA ROUTE Robert Mann Gallery Mattingly Mary Mattingly
sur le chemin: mary mattingly SUR LA ROUTE Robert Mann Gallery Mattingly Mary Mattingly
sur le chemin: mary mattingly SUR LA ROUTE Robert Mann Gallery Mattingly Mary Mattingly
sur le chemin: mary mattingly SUR LA ROUTE Robert Mann Gallery Mattingly Mary Mattingly
Mattingly on the photos:




I began the series Nomadographies by doing research, drawing sketches, and by imagining a possible scenario. The story evolved into a series of ad hoc and adaptive low and hi-tech solutions for the circumstances of nomadic life, goals of self-sufficiency, and depictions of a not-so-distant future when the amount of forced environmental and political refugees has increased worldwide, and new temporary communities are continuously created and recreatedNomadographies is a pilgrimage through real and imagined terrains, a travelogue for the future.


Also in this vein is Mattingly’s video, Pangaea Ultima, which presents a world that once was and might be again: Earth is returned via some ecological disaster to a prehistoric state. A voiceover tells us about an era in which the rainforests have been leveled, turned into deserts. We see images of wandering tribes of humans inhabiting a raging, shifting, inhospitable climate. The viewer is left uncertain as to how far into the future—43 years, or centuries from now?—this cataclysm is supposed to occur.


See video below; clic ici if the player doesn’t appear.



De l’autre côté, there’s documentation of Mattingly’s Waterpod project—an incredible, utopian-sounding but very real undertaking. The Waterpod was a 120 foot barge on which the artist and a team of collaborators lived and worked for five months in 2009. It was conceived as a “floating, sculptural eco-habitat designed for the rising tides,” according to the project website.

sur le chemin: mary mattingly SUR LA ROUTE Robert Mann Gallery Mattingly Mary Mattingly
sur le chemin: mary mattingly SUR LA ROUTE Robert Mann Gallery Mattingly Mary Mattingly
sur le chemin: mary mattingly SUR LA ROUTE Robert Mann Gallery Mattingly Mary Mattingly
Mattingly received help from Appropedia founder Lonny Grafman and students from his Humboldt State University engineering class, Ingénierie 215: Introduction to Design, in which students typically “work in teams with a client to address some real-world problem or opportunity.”


The problems Grafman’s team needed to solve included generating power, purifying water, disposing of human waste, and raising chickens:




components of the Waterpod include a classic CCAT pedal-powered electric generator called the Human Energy Converter (H.E.C.). There’s also a hydroponic system growing herbs for the kitchen, a dry composting toilet (akin to an outhouse) and a high-tech filtered rainwater catchment system (like an old-fashioned cistern, but safer) with a hydropower system capturing energy from the overflow. A high-tech chicken coop designed by a team of students was adapted by a New York artist utilizing a repurposed shipping crate.


The Waterpod visited all of New York’s five boroughs and Governor’s Island, taking on passengers at every stop. It became a site where scientists, artistes, artistes, and ordinary New Yorkers could exchange information, educate one another, and think seriously about what sort of future world we humans are designing through decisions we make now—and what it might take to survive there.

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