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Artist Talk: Sarah Hearn and Microbial Multiverse
Oct
5
5:30 PM17:30

Artist Talk: Sarah Hearn and Microbial Multiverse

Sarah Hearn will share insights about her latest interconnected bodies of work that visualize invisible microbial worlds. What’s a microbe? Only Earth’s oldest living organisms, so tiny that they are absolutely-everywhere-all-the-time. They are the essential workers of our biome doing unimaginable jobs. The artist has studied the forms and functions of species like fungal mycelia, bacteria, viruses, yeasts and molds. Hearn will discuss her artistic response to this research which produced the monumental gel pen drawings, watercolor paintings, and small sculptures of hand felted wool on display in the Microbial Multiverse exhibition through October 14.

5:30 PM - Refreshments & Meet the Artist
6:00 PM - Artist Talk


About the Artist

Sarah Hearn is an interdisciplinary artist, researcher and educator based in Norman, OK. Through research-based explorations of biological life and natural phenomena, Hearn’s art practice inhabits two realms - one grounded in studies of life on planet earth, and another in an atmosphere of science fiction. Her artwork reveals a multitude of invisible worlds hidden in nature opening a path of discovery to empathetic interspecies learning/appreciation. The artist works fluently in the media of drawing, photography, installation, book making and social practice. She frequently collaborates with fellow artists, scientists and municipalities on rhizomatic projects that expand the fields art and the concept of community. 

WEBSITE: SARAHHEARN.ART
INSTAGRAM:
@SARAHMHEARN
FACEBOOK:
SARAHHEARNART


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5:30 PM17:30

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Join us for the opening Reception of the Microbial Multiverse exhibition by Sarah Hearn.

Thursday, August 31, 5:30 P.M.

There will be a wine tasting, gallery tour, and an opportunity to meet the artist.

Microbes are Earth’s oldest living organisms. They live in consortia with all other forms of life. Trillions of microbes occupy all bodies—living or dead, human, or animal --inside and out. Microbes are woven within the intricacies of our ecosystems. They permeate clouds, atmospheres, and human brains. “Microbial Multiverse” is an exhibition of interconnected bodies of work celebrating these latent lifeforms and their multifaceted function within our universe. 

Microbes are responsible for cycling carbon and nutrients within the soil allowing nutrient rich flora to grow and fauna to flourish and decompose. Some are extremophiles, capable of surviving in the harshest conditions including Earth’s polar caps and even outer space. Microbes are essential components of all biological life, yet we still know so little about them. This work explores what we can learn from their ability to communicate across species, adapt and thrive. How can we better understand and appreciate the microbial role among our planet and potentially beyond? The bodies of work described below employ a variety of media and approaches to depict the elusive and remarkable existence of these miniature marvels.


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photos by Ann Sherman


After graduating from the Rhode Island School of Design with a ceramics major, Betty Busby founded a custom ceramic tile manufacturing firm in Los Angeles. After nearly 20 years of running the firm, she sold the business in 1994 (it is still in operation to this day). Upon relocating to New Mexico, she changed the focus of her artwork to fiber, taking it full time in 2004.

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The classic fractal structures of the sub microscopic world are a persistent model, as are natural processes, such as oxidation, replication and growth.

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