UMF Art Gallery first stop in North American tour of “Precious Cargo/Precious World,” an exhibition of Global Environmental Artists, March 23 – May 6

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mp Warming. (Submitted Image)

FARMINGTON – The UMF Art Gallery is thrilled to present “Precious Cargo/Precious World,” an exhibition of Global Environmental Artists. Curated by mp Warming, the exhibit will be on display Thursday, March 23 – Saturday, May 6.

An opening reception will be held March 23 from 5-7 p.m. It is free and open to the public.

From its inaugural exhibition, this collection of art by global environmental artists has been dedicated to positive action for Earth’s recovery by representing the leading-edge of environmental art making.

In keeping with its mission and to limit the carbon footprint of its transport, the collection has traveled abroad via the sailing ship AVONTUUR and has arrived in North America for its pilot exhibition at the University of Maine at Farmington.

In November 2020, the first, performance-activist stage of Precious Cargo/Precious World launched the artworks of a battalion of global environmental artists on a voyage on the AVONTUUR, a two-masted gaff rigged schooner built in 1920, from Hamburg to Douarnenez, France. This low-carbon-footprint voyage lampooned the extravagance of luxury art transport today via airplanes and high-end commercial shipping.

The sailing ship AVONTUUR. (Submitted Image)

The second stage of Precious Cargo/Precious World is exhibition. Through the collective display of the artworks of Louise Beer (New Zealand/UK), Adam Crosson (USA), Brent Dedas (USA), Manuela Fischer (Switzerland), Nikolina Kovalenko (Russia), Agnieszka Kozłowska, (Poland), Gerardo Nolasco (Mexico), Christine Pereira-Adams (UK), Stefan Schlumpf (Switzerland), Nina Schipoff (Switzerland), Hilla Steinert & Uwe Arens (Germany), Alisi Telengut (Canada/Mongolia), Rosa Vetrano, (Italy), and mp Warming (USA: Spearheader of the Art/NaturSci Movement), diverse collaborations with scientists and natural environments come together to form a visual manifesto on beauty and sustainability.

The final stage of the Precious Cargo/Precious World project is education and engagement—to spread awe and understanding of the natural world and its dangers, and to hear the voices of children and all people in response.

Curator mp Warming (Berlin, Germany/US) is a multimedia artist/curator and the founder of the Art/NaturSci Movement and Art Science Exhibits Berlin. Her socially engaged, environmental art projects include international, large-scale exhibitions and installations.

She likens her social engaged art partnerships to a contemporary Warhol Factory, “without the beds and drugs”. One example of her socially engaged art projects is the Gorenflos Flowerhaus. Warming’s main exhibition site has been the stunning Grand Hall of Thaer Institut at Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, located in the very heart of city, and next door to her partners at the vast Museum für Naturkunde.

In her recent work, mp Warming has collaborated with evolutionary biologists. She has worked/drawn in the collection rooms of the American Museum of Natural History, the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology, the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, and Yale’s Peabody Museum of Natural History.

Warming’s work was featured as a performing artist at the 2009 Venice Biennale. In 2019, her prints were exhibited at the Venice Biennale and the WATOU Arts Festival in Belgium. Her curatorial and art making for the 2019 Venice Biennale Art/NaturSci Pavilion was sponsored in part by Villa Sträuli in Switzerland, where her studio spanned the top floor of the villa.

Warming’s art on paper is in permanent collections at the V.V. Nabokov Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia and the Philology Library designed by Foster + Partners at the Freie Universität Berlin.

The UMF Art Gallery is dedicated to bringing contemporary art to the campus and regional communities. The gallery is located at 246 Main Street, behind the Admissions Office. Gallery hours are Tuesdays-Sundays 12-4 p.m., and by appointment. Please contact Sarah at maline@maine.edu  or 778-1062 for more information or to make an appointment.

 

Nina Schipoff image “Danse Macabre” (2019). Submitted Image.
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