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Opening Reception: Ebb + Flow

  • UCSD Geisel Library Gallery 9500 Gilman Drive San Diego, CA, 92093 United States (map)

Join the UC San Diego Library for an exhibit opening reception to celebrate Ebb and Flow: Giant Kelp Forests through Art, Science and the Archives.

This event is free and open to the public with registration.

Program

6 p.m.: Opening reception starts

6:30 p.m.: Lightning talks with artists and scientists featured in the exhibit:

7:30 p.m.: Opening reception concludes

Beginning January 12, 2024, the UC San Diego Library will host Ebb and Flow: Giant Kelp Forests through Art, Science and the Archives, an exhibit curated by Oriana Poindexter ’15, Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) alumna and artist. The exhibit displays works created as a result of continued observation of the local giant kelp forest environment by artists, scientists and community members over the past 134 years. 

The artwork, which will be displayed on the walls of Geisel Library’s main gallery and in The Nest, is the interpretation of the giant kelp forest by four local contemporary artists - Julia C R Gray, Dwight Hwang, Marie McKenzie and Oriana Poindexter - in their own distinct styles using ceramic, sculpture, oil painting, gyotaku and alternative photographic processes.

Seaweed pressings collected in La Jolla from 1890 through 2023 will also be on display. A 1905 seaweed pressing album from the Library’s Special Collections & Archives (SC&A), created by Virginia Scripps and her sister, Ellen Browning Scripps, the founding benefactor of SIO, shows a similar diversity of seaweed species as recent pressings created by SIO Professor Jennifer Smith. Additional pressings from the SIO Herbarium Collection, now housed at the San Diego Natural History Museum (The Nat), will be on loan from the museum for this exhibit and will accompany those from SC&A. 

Ebb and Flow illuminates the evolution and the persistence of giant kelp forests, ebbing and flowing through time but continuing to hold fast to the rocky shorelines. The works in this collection document the giant kelp forests and associated species from 1890 to the present day by uniting archival material with contemporary art, bridging art and science to inspire awe, ignite curiosity and catalyze dialogue.

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January 20

Cyanotype Workshop: Carlsbad Library/Campana Studios

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February 8

Hold Fast: A New Way to Experience Kelp