By SDCN Editor
La Jolla, CA–Birch Aquarium at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego will open Hold Fast on February 8, a powerful and immersive art exhibit that invites the public to explore the impact of climate change on the local kelp forest through the lens of three local artists and scientists.
The public can explore a labyrinth of cyanotype-printed giant kelp by photo-based artist and marine scientist Oriana Poindexter, come face to face with local species by gyotaku prints by artist Dwight Hwang, and peer into the tiny world of kelp propagation with Scripps Oceanography Ph.D. student Mohammad Sedarat.
“Warming waters and giant kelp don’t mix. We have to be realistic about the outsized impact that climate change has on our local Giant Kelp forests,” said Megan Dickerson, Birch Aquarium’s Director of Exhibits and co-curator of the installation. “But at the same time, local people are doing beautiful things. This Hold Fast installation posits that the actions of local artists and scientists can give us hope that together, as a community, we can make collective change as we also acknowledge climate trauma.”
Hold Fast challenges the ideas of what climate work can include by bridging the worlds of art and science, and offers the opportunity to explore how our talents can be harnessed as we work together to protect our ocean.
“The Giant Kelp forests off San Diego are ebbing and flowing despite the anthropogenic impacts that complicate their existence,” said Poindexter, who is also co-curator of the installation.
“My method to engage with the giant kelp forests is to free dive in, around, through them — and to collect specimens from which to artistically document both the environment and the experience. The physicality of this process is therapeutic for me as I grapple with the impacts of humanity on the environment.”
Hwang is a classic Japanese gyotaku artist who aims to tell stories through his animal and fish prints. In Hold Fast, his prints will focus on local kelp forest animals found off La Jolla shores, allowing guests to get an even closer view of these fascinating species.
Poindexter is an artist and marine scientist who is documenting the changes in La Jolla’s local kelp forests through photo-based artwork. In Hold Fast, her life-sized cyanotype prints on fabric create a stunning kelp forest for guests to explore without getting wet.
Sedarat is a Ph.D. student at the Smith Lab at Scripps Oceanography whose research explores the impact of climate change on La Jolla’s kelp forest. In Hold Fast, his work demonstrates why critical giant kelp ecosystems have not returned since recent marine heatwaves and explore what we can do to bring them back through genetic banking and propagation.
UC San Diego Library is hosting an accompanying exhibit, Ebb and Flow: Giant Kelp Forests through Art, Science and the Archives, at Geisel Library now through April 21. Uniting archival material with contemporary art, this exhibit showcases 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.
Hold Fast replaces Oddities: Hidden Heroes of the Scripps Collections which opened at Birch Aquarium in June 2018 and has welcomed more than 2 million guests from around the world. Hold Fast will be on display until September.
Hold Fast is included with the cost of general admission of $24.95 for adults and $19.95 for children ages 3 to 17. Annual memberships are also available. The aquarium is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily with extended seasonal hours from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. from March 1 through Labor Day. Advanced reservations are required. Visit aquarium.ucsd.edu for more information including a daily schedule of events.