The Migration of Pestilence
A collaborative art project including Ellyn Weiss, Sondra Arkin and Veronica Szalus
Vector-borne diseases, including malaria, dengue and zika, among others, are transmitted by small organisms
(vectors) such as mosquitoes, eas or ticks that carry pathogens from animals to humans, person to person
and place to place. As the earth warms and climate changes, the environment conducive to the spread of these
diseases expands, exposing vulnerable new populations that lack any protection to these pathogens. In these
circumstances, vector-borne diseases can spread rapidly and in unexpected ways, posing severe challenges
to national governments, international health systems and the world’s population. We see this today with the
outbreak of zika. The amount of greenhouse gases already in the environment ensures that the phenomenon
will only increase for at least the medium-term future regardless of the success of efforts to curtail emissions of
CO2.
Artists
Ellyn Weiss, Sondra Arkin and Veronica Szalus have been exhibiting their work locally and nationally for over 20 years; all have signi cant experience creating installation art, as well as more traditional wall-hung work. Weiss and Arkin, for example, collaborated on a gallery- lling installation at the Gateway Arts Center entitled “Big Ideas”, concerned with the evolution of the area now known as the Gateway Arts District. Weiss collabo- rated on a climate change-related installation created at the American Association for the Advancement of Sci- ence and at the McLean Project for the Arts, called “Voyage of Discovery”, which evoked a trip to the melting polar regions. Szalus has created numerous installations, often using fragile and ethereal materials to address the impact of the environment upon them and allow the viewer to become a witness to temporary conditions that frame our lives.
Sound art created for the exhibition by Barry Schmetter
Access sound HERE
Hours:
Saturdays Noon-5:00 By Appointment M-F
Ellyn Weiss, Sondra Arkin and Veronica Szalus have been exhibiting their work locally and nationally for over 20 years; all have signi cant experience creating installation art, as well as more traditional wall-hung work. Weiss and Arkin, for example, collaborated on a gallery- lling installation at the Gateway Arts Center entitled “Big Ideas”, concerned with the evolution of the area now known as the Gateway Arts District. Weiss collabo- rated on a climate change-related installation created at the American Association for the Advancement of Sci- ence and at the McLean Project for the Arts, called “Voyage of Discovery”, which evoked a trip to the melting polar regions. Szalus has created numerous installations, often using fragile and ethereal materials to address the impact of the environment upon them and allow the viewer to become a witness to temporary conditions that frame our lives.
Sound art created for the exhibition by Barry Schmetter
Access sound HERE
Hours:
Saturdays Noon-5:00 By Appointment M-F
Otis Street Arts Project
3706 Otis Street
Mount Rainier, MD 20712
Mount Rainier, MD 20712
202.550.4634
otisstreetartsproject@gmail.com
otisstreearts.org
otisstreearts.org
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