SciArt Magazine - All Issues | Page 16

STRAIGHT TALK with Alexis Rockman Photo credit: Dorothy Spears Alexis Rockman is an artist who works with the issues of climate change, genetic modification of food, pollution, evolution, and the anthropocene, creating large-scale paintings and painting series. Beginning this line of work in the 80s, Rockman has gained international renown for his critique of human activity on our environment. Rockman lives and works in New York City. By Julia Buntaine Editor-in-Chief dioramas, I realized that the landscape that was used for describing ecology no longer or may never have existed. I decided that many of my expectations from institutional dioramas were at odds with what had been going on in the world—these images pretended that humans didn’t exist. With this in mind, I decided to show the human and post-industrial revolution impact on these ecosystems. I AR: I always felt there was something miss- also felt that this was challenging not only in terms of painting; it was also exciting politiing in the dioramas when I would visit these museums—a darker, more idiosyncratic story. cally. At that time, I was starting to think There also seemed to be a tremendous collec- about activist thinking, and I felt there were a lot of lessons from the civil rights movetive consciousness to American post-World War II pop and scientific culture that hadn’t ment and feminist and gay rights that might been tapped in art. This seemed a good place be used in the eco-activist movement. This was a time when AIDS crisis was emerging, to start in 1986. At first, I was excited to and I watched not only friends die but also make paintings and watercolors that were the mobilization of the gay community as a more abut my love of museums. As my ideas force for positive change. developed, I thought it would be interesting to start to include iconography that wasn’t found in natural history imagery—pollution, JB: For almost 30 years your exhibited work has surrounded the themes of ecology, human and anitrash, environmental destruction, and invamal relationships, genetic modification, evolution, sive species. As I started to travel more to so-called ‘wild places’ depicted in many of the and domestication, to name a few. From your point JB: Your first series, “Natural History,” is reminiscent of the American Museum of Natural History diorama displays that captivate kids and adults alike. Unlike those illustrative dioramas, however, your paintings depict scenes that would not always be found in nature, combining elements that reveal deeper relationships or speak to complex issues. How did you come to create this type of work? 16 SciArt in America December 20 @