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Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Interview with sculptor, Rebecca Schultz


Towards the backdrop of biodiversity loss and local weather change, as we speak, greater than ever, it’s important that folks have alternatives to expertise and develop relationships with native ecosystems and species. A World in our Streams is a site-specific sculptural mission by artist Rebecca Schultz, designed to make vital connections between folks and place, relationships that are particularly wanted by many individuals at this second. 

Rebecca Schultz’ sculptures are impressed by the kinds and supplies utilized by Indigenous peoples to construct conventional fish traps, together with Hester-Dandy substrate samplers, a instrument used to gather macroinvertebrate samples from freshwater. Schultz’ compelling tackle these kinds are exhibited in Tookany Creek, in Excessive Faculty Park, Elkins Park, PA. A World in Our Streams combines inventive artworks and conservation science to discover the dynamic habitat of aquatic macroinvertebrates.

Jeanne Dodds, Endangered Species Coalition Artistic Engagement Director, shares a dialog with Rebecca Schultz about her inventive mission A World in our Stream, and the way this mission suits into her bigger inventive apply supporting biodiversity conservation.

Photograph credit: Julia Manner @jwayprojects and Djibrine Mainassara @djibrinemainassara

Jeanne Dodds: What are aquatic macroinvertebrates, anyhow? What makes them such fascinating and ecologically important species? And amazingly, some macroinvertebrates are pollinators…. inform us how that works!

Rebecca Schultz: Macroinvertebrates are animals with no spine that you would be able to see with out utilizing a microscope or magnifying glass. This contains insect larvae–resembling dragonflies, damselflies, stoneflies, and mayflies–who spend extra of their lives within the water than they do on land. Many flies reside solely weeks, days, and even minutes after they emerge from the water as adults–they don’t have mouth elements to eat–and so they focus totally on reproducing earlier than they die. Freshwater snails, worms, and crustaceans like crayfish and their smaller cousin known as scuds are additionally macroinvertebrates. 

One of many vital issues about macroinvertebrates is that they’re wonderful bioindicators. They assist us to evaluate the well being of a water physique, as a result of they reside most of their life within the stream and completely different ones are kind of delicate to air pollution. So in case you discover sure species–for instance, caddisflies, which I discovered within the stretch of Tookany Creek the place I put in my sculpture–which are very delicate to air pollution. So their presence signifies that the creek is wholesome. The opposite factor about macroinvertebrates is that some–just like the stonefly–are pollinators, or they’re meals for different pollinators, resembling hummingbirds. In brief, they’re a critically vital a part of watershed ecosystems.  

JD: Why do you assume it’s vital to acknowledge and take note of much less well-known species, resembling macroinvertebrates? 

RS: I contemplate myself fairly educated concerning the pure world and native ecosystems, however I didn’t know something about macroinvertebrates till I took the coaching on them. This lack of information was mirrored within the viewers for my artist speak–so many individuals got here as much as me afterwards and thanked me for elevating consciousness about these creatures that almost all of them have by no means considered. 

I believe this consciousness is especially vital as a result of bugs are a crucial element of our ecosystems. They make up over two-thirds of the world’s 1.5 million identified animal species, and present estimates point out that 40% of insect species are in decline, and a 3rd are endangered. Habitat loss, using pesticides and local weather change are probably the most important threats. So studying about macroinvertebrates is step one to being motivated to guard their habitat. 

Photograph credit: Julia Manner @jwayprojects and Djibrine Mainassara @djibrinemainassara
Photograph caption: Rebecca Schultz delivering her Artist Stroll and Speak to attendees at Excessive Faculty Park, for the opening of the A World in Our Streams set up

JD: How did you make the connection between your inventive apply and  themes of macroinvertebrate habitat in your present mission, A World in Our Streams?

RS: For a variety of years, the impetus for my inventive work has been to assist restore the connection between us people and the more-than-human world by reconnecting us with the ecosystems that encompass us. I imagine that doing so is crucial to our collective survival within the face of the local weather and biodiversity crises. 

Watersheds have advanced because the ecosystems I’m significantly fascinated about–they’re the essence of what scientists are more and more calling the crucial zone, the place rock, water, crops, fungi, and–primarily based on newer science, microbes–work together with one another to create the muse for all times. And, the place I reside, our environmental challenges heart on water–methods to adapt to heavier rainfall and stormwater runoff, mixed sewer overflow, and flooding on account of heavier rainfall. It’s vital to me to have some baseline scientific information of the ecosystems I work with, so in 2022 I turned a streamkeeper with the Tookany/Tacony-Frankford Watershed Partnership (TTF). I monitor a piece of Tookany Creek as soon as a month, and thru that work have attended trainings to raised perceive methods to assess the well being of watersheds. I used to be supplied the chance to get licensed as a Save Our Streams monitor, which entailed studying methods to pattern and establish macroinvertebrates. And I turned actually fascinated with them! 

JD:  How did you develop the connection between your paintings and the placement of Excessive Faculty Park and Tookany Creek? Why and the way is that this place particularly vital to your work? 

Photograph credit: Julia Manner @jwayprojects and Djibrine Mainassara @djibrinemainassara

RS: I moved to this space in 2016, after 20 years of residing within the San Francisco Bay Space, the place the regional parks have been one among my favourite locations to spend time. Excessive Faculty Park is a 10-minute stroll from my dwelling, and whereas it’s small, it’s mighty! For thirty years, our neighbors have labored diligently to revive numerous native ecosystems, from a meadow to woodlands, to the stretch of Tookany Creek that runs by the Park. It’s such a particular place. 

Within the final 8 years, I’ve discovered a lot about native ecosystems–a lot of that from the relationships I’ve constructed with native environmental organizations, like Pals of Excessive Faculty Park and the Tookany/Tacony-Frankford Watershed Partnership (TTF). Tookany Creek winds by Cheltenham Township on its approach to the Delaware River; by my volunteering as a streamkeeper and the continued evolution of my apply, I’ve turn out to be increasingly more related to this panorama. A lot so, that when my stepson handed away in January, our household planted a tree for him in Excessive Faculty Park. All of us go to the tree–an American Persimmon–commonly. It has turn out to be a web site of solace for us, within the face of profound grief. 

JD: Please inform us a bit extra about your inventive apply, particularly, your earlier initiatives at Excessive Faculty Park involving watersheds and soils.

RS: About ten years in the past, I re-focused my inventive apply on visible artwork, after many years of constructing theater and efficiency artwork. On the similar time, I used to be changing into extra conscious of the dimensions of the intertwined local weather and biodiversity crises, and needed my work to be a response. As I turned extra fascinated about artwork and ecology, I needed to begin making outside installations with pure supplies. In 2020, throughout covid, I requested Cynthia Blackwood, the park supervisor, if I might do some installations in Excessive Faculty Park. I used to be very grateful to have the chance to experiment on this manner. The next 12 months, my buddy and fellow artist Julia Manner, who was on the Pals of Excessive Faculty Park board, began a summer time outside artwork program. I collaborated with Brenda Howell on the piece Stroll the Inexperienced Path, which created a pathway by the native meadow, with signage concerning the widespread, latin, and Lenape names of medicinal crops that have been rising there. In 2023, my community-engaged, participatory artwork and group science mission Mapping Our Watershed was additionally a part of the summer time sequence. 

Additionally in 2023, Cynthia was within the course of of making a “stumpery” within the Park, and requested me if I’d make a stump sculpture with items of timber that had been lower down. Tree stumps and fallen timber are the location of wealthy ecosystems, together with crops, mosses, lichen, fungi, and bugs. As soon as I had completed the piece, Cynthia put native crops in round it. I go to the stump sculpture each single time I’m on the park, as a result of it’s continuously altering and evolving. It’s now a collaboration with hundreds of different residing issues, what I name my more-than-human relations. This piece impressed me to wish to create extra sculptural habitat, and led me to A World in Our Streams

JD: What do you hope that audiences and individuals engaged with this mission take away from their experiences with the set up and macroinvertebrates?

RS: I hope they achieve a better understanding of, and appreciation for, aquatic macroinvertebrates, in order that they’re extra motivated to preserve and shield them as a necessary a part of our watersheds. In Cheltenham Township, water is one among our most urgent environmental points–how we’ll adapt to rising heavy rainfall and the ensuing stormwater runoff, and the way we’ll shield the biodiversity that retains our watersheds wholesome in order that they’re extra resilient. My work is grounded by an intent so fantastically captured by Senegalese environmentalist Baba Dioum: “In the long run we’ll preserve solely what we love; we’ll love solely what we perceive; and we’ll perceive solely what we’re taught.”

I additionally need audiences to grasp that artwork is a crucial automobile for imagining and establishing the world we would like, a world the place we acknowledge and step into our function as part of ecosystems, not separate from it. I used to be in France just lately, and had the unbelievable expertise of seeing cave work that have been made 27,000 years in the past. Our ancestors had brief and onerous lives, however they nonetheless made artwork. It’s important to our humanity. 

JD: Is there anything concerning the mission you’d prefer to share with the ESC viewers?

RS: This mission has been a lesson in resilience and adaptability. I put in three sculptures woven from willow branches, impressed by the types of indigenous fish traps, in Tookany Creek the day earlier than my artist speak. I additionally put two sculptures impressed by Hester Dendy macroinvertebrate samplers into the stream, tied to cinder blocks. That evening, there was a storm the place we had practically an inch of rain in an hour and 35 mph wind gusts. I got here again the subsequent morning, and the woven sculptures have been nearly utterly destroyed. One of many Hester Dendys was nowhere to be discovered. Water is extraordinarily highly effective. I shortly rebuilt two woven kinds, which are shorter and extra densely woven than the primary set, and put in them within the creek. It’s now been greater than two weeks, and so they’re doing okay. They’re truly accumulating leaves and different pure particles, which is an efficient factor. They’re evolving in collaboration with the creek. On August twenty fourth, I’ll co-facilitate a workshop with my buddy and collaborator Ryan Neuman from TTF, the place we’ll pattern macroinvertebrates from the sculptures and see what we discover! 

A World in Our Streams exhibit is sponsored by the Endangered Species Coalition Pollinator Protectors marketing campaign, in collaboration with Pals of Excessive Faculty Park.

Photograph credit: @jwayprojects and @djibrinemainassara



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