The Ocean After Nature, installation view, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, 2016.
This event is organized by Swiss Institute in collaboration with ICI on the occasion of the exhibition
The Ocean After Nature on view at The New School's Sheila C. Johnson Design Center at Parsons School of Design (February 9 — April 17, 2018).
The Ocean After Nature Lecture by Alaina Claire Feldman Wednesday, September 6, 5 pm Exhibition opening reception to follow
The Ocean After Nature The Hugh Lane, Dublin City Gallery Charelmont House Parnell Square N, Dublin September 6, 2017 - January 7, 2018
When
The Ocean After Nature artist Peter Fend visited our office on April 20, 2016 to discuss his work in ICI's upcoming exhibition, he brought along with him his annotation of the April 17 New York Times opinion piece «A New Map For America.»
Dublin Gallery Weekend Drexciya event Saturday, November 25 In tandem with
The Ocean After Nature, join The Hugh Lane for this evening event inspired by the elusive Drexciya, the techno - electro duo from Detroit.
In conjunction with
The Ocean After Nature at The New School / Parsons School of Design, the Swiss Institute and ICI have co-organized a screening of Ursula Biemann's Geomorphic Videos at Anthology Film Archives.
The Ocean After Nature is a traveling exhibition curated by Alaina Claire Feldman and produced by Independent Curators International (ICI), New York.
She recently organized the exhibition
The Ocean After Nature and its subsequent catalogue, which will debut at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco (June 2016) followed by an international tour.
Evelyn Rydz's Floating Artifacts, at the Aidekman Arts Center, is presented as a part of SMFA's larger project,
The Ocean After Nature, which examines the human effects on the ocean.
The Ocean After Nature is an exhibition curated by Alaina Claire Feldman and organized by Independent Curators International (ICI), New York.
The Ocean after Nature examines the ocean as a site reflecting ecological, political and economic realities through the work of more than 20 artists and collectives, including Ursula Biemann, Drexciya, Renée Green, Peter Hutton, An - My Lê, The Otolith Group and Ulrike Ottinger.
Not exact matches
After translating and presenting the famous passage from Ûisang's work,
Ocean Seal, Odin culls from it the principal descriptive elements of «harmonization,» «non-obstruction,» «interpenetration,» «mutual identification,» «all is one and one is all,» «interfusion,» «mutual containedness, etc., to depict the
nature of dharmadhatu (p. 66).
Thanks to Swarm's precise measurements along with those from Champ — a mission that ended in 2010
after measuring Earth's gravity and magnetic fields for more than 10 years — scientists have not only been able to find the magnetic field generated by
ocean tides but, remarkably, they have used this new information to image the electrical
nature of Earth's upper mantle 250 km below the
ocean floor.
We are made of 80 percent water
after all, so it is quite natural to imagine that the pull of the moon also affects us in the same way it does
oceans, plants, and
nature.
Mother
nature had different ideas and landslides closed the Great
Ocean Road just
after Apollo Bay so we were forced down the C119.
Belize is the place where coconut palms and white sand beaches were born: where mother
nature smiles happily
after seeing her glorious creation of exquisite
oceans, barrier reefs, atolls and rich rainforest.
Visit Old Navarino Castle and take in sweeping
ocean views
after a stroll in the sun or plan a day of
nature - filled fun at the Polylimnio Waterfalls or Neda Waterfalls.
Experience a unique holiday relaxing on your own
ocean front balcony getting closer to
nature sunbaking, reading, eating your delicious Yamba seafood, watching the Dolphins & Whales, counting the fishing trawlers, experiencing the wonderful storms and beautiful stars & full moon, catch the magnificent sunrises and leave reluctantly totally refreshed and rested
after being put to sleep whenever you so desire from the sound of the
ocean waves.
Relax in a sunken spa bath
after a day on the Great
Ocean Walk whilst listening to your favourite music and surrounded by nothing but
nature.
Much more than a holiday destination (although a wonderful place to relax and recharge), the Great
Ocean Ecolodge and the Conservation Ecology Centre offer hope and a connection with
nature that is inspiring and exciting.There are opportunities for you to make a significant difference as many people choose to stay involved long
after their initial visit.
Watch little penguins and short - tailed shearwaters return to their burrows from the
ocean after dusk on an evening tour with Inala
Nature Tours.
Sit back and relax with a glass of wine
after a refreshing surf session, catching the last sunshine... The Algarve is the place to be for
nature and
ocean lovers.
The group exhibition «Resistance
After Nature» tracks the practices of artists who imagine and construct alternative approaches to such entangled ecological, political, and economic issues as Indigenous sovereignty and water rights, the fossil economy,
ocean acidification, and deforestation.
The findings of the Census of Marine Life Tagging of Pacific Predators project, published online today in the journal
Nature, are particularly significant because they come just days
after another evaluation of the world's
oceans pointed to severe disruption driven by over-exploitation, rising carbon dioxide concentrations, torrents of nutrients choking coastal waters and rising temperatures.
The Bates et al research (
Nature) on Hurricane Felix indicates that it takes about 2 weeks for the
oceans to «recharge»
after a storm.
Marine scientist Andrew Moy at the Antarctic Climate & Ecosystems Cooperative Research Center (ACE) in Hobart, Tasmania, and his Australian colleagues report in
Nature Geoscience this week that they made this finding
after comparing G. bulloides shells in
ocean cores collected along the South Tasman Rise in 1995 with samples from traps collected between 1997 and 2004.
I am,
after all a teacher, and this seemed like a good opportunity to explain why, for example, I thought more attention should be paid to sea level rise, which is ongoing and unstoppable and carries a real threat of acceleration, than to the unsupportable claims that the
ocean circulation was undergoing shutdown (
Nature, December 2005).