![]() |
(Photo: Courtesy of the Robert Mann Gallery)
|
In Mary Mattingly’s photo series “Second Nature,” the Earth has been submerged, and the remaining humans eke out isolated, nomadic existences. Her images may be staged and digitally enhanced, but like the other photographs and videos in ICP’s triennial “Ecotopia,” they seize on the very real anxieties created by a few seasons of hurricanes, tsunamis, and record-breaking heat. From Oregon’s clear-cut forests to Israel’s pine groves planted over the ruins of evacuated Arab towns, these artists show the “natural” environment as less a refuge than a global battleground.
Ecotopia, International Center of Photography; September 14 through January 7


Email
Print
Why Oliver Stone Made His Bush Biopic, W.
Theater Review: A Man for All Seasons
David Edelstein on Happy-Go-Lucky
Hilary Berseth's Buzzworthy Sculptures
Look Book: The Visual Merchandiser 
Home Design: The Country in the City
Allegretti Attempts
Vintage Stores to Keep You Stylish on a Budget
Why Would Sarah Palin Ever Leave Wasilla?

How Nate Silver Built a Better Crystal Ball
Obama's Optimistic Populism 