Brooklyn Public Library names Mary Mattingly as the Katowitz Radin Artist in Residence for 2020
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Brooklyn Public Library names Mary Mattingly as the Katowitz Radin Artist in Residence for 2020
Dario Robleto, The Computer of Jupiter, 2019. Various cut and polished shells, urchin spines, cut and quilled paper, squilla claws, colored powder pigments, colored plastic beads, acrylic domes, brass ink, colored mirror and Plexiglas, glue, acrylic on wood, 48 x 19 x 19 in (121.9 x 48.3 x 48.3 cm) including pedestal and vitrine. Image: Jessi Bowman. Courtesy the artist and Inman Gallery, Houston.



BROOKLYN, NY.- Brooklyn Public Library announced Stars Down to Earth, an exhibition weaving the wonders of the cosmos together with urgent questions around habitable futures on earth, featuring works by artists Mary Mattingly and Dario Robleto. BPL also announces Mary Mattingly as the Library’s Katowitz Radin Artist in Residence for 2020. Instituted in 2014, the annual residency supports emerging and established artists to meaningfully engage with BPL’s collections, programs, and services as a way to expand their art making practice.

Pairing two artists who are deeply engaged in inter-disciplinary work as citizen scientists, artist ambassadors, and ethicists, Stars Down to Earth juxtaposes Mattingly’s living sculpture and nature morte photographs of the mining and gas industry with Robleto’s intricate sculptures comprised of carefully researched and sourced materials including natural artifacts. Through this joint exhibition, which will be accompanied by artist talks and intensive public workshops focused on ecology, Mattingly and Robleto invite library patrons to imagine possible futures and gain hands-on knowledge.

Dario Robleto will open the exhibition with an artist talk on January 13, 2020, at BPL’s Central Library on Grand Army Plaza, and Stars Down to Earth will also include public programs at BPL’s new Greenpoint Library and Environmental Education Center after the branch is completed in early 2020. Additional public programs at both branches will be announced in January 2020. Later in the spring, Mattingly’s living sculpture, A Technological Abyss, 2020, invites additional public programming held in partnership with More Art and Prospect Park Alliance.

Alongside BPL’s recently launched Creative-In-Residence program In Praise of Failure, co-organized with William Kentridge and his Johannesburg-based arts incubator the Centre for the Less Good Idea, the Katowitz Radin Artist in Residence expands on the Library’s mission to provide educational, economic, and cultural enrichment opportunities of the highest quality to the 2.6 million individuals who make Brooklyn home.

Stars Down to Earth public programs include:

• Exhibition Opening and Artist Talk with Dario Robleto, January 13, 2020. Click here to register.

• Green Series: Artist Talk with Mary Mattingly, February 20, 2020. Click here to register.

• Green Series: Youth Program with Mary Mattingly, March 12, 2020. Participants will make their own native wildflower and pollinator seed sculptures by combining seeds, clay, and compost—perfect for tossing anywhere in need of an extra burst of color—or butterflies!

Stars Down To Earth: Mary Mattingly & Dario Robleto is curated by Cora Fisher, Curator of Visual Art Programming. The exhibition is made possible by the Katowitz Radin Endowment and programming is realized in partnership with the Prospect Park Alliance and More Art.

Mary Mattingly is a visual artist focused on questions of ecology and sustainability. She founded Swale, an edible landscape on a barge in New York City. Docked at public piers but following waterways common laws, Swale circumnavigates New York's public land laws, allowing anyone to pick free fresh food. Swale instigated and co-created the "foodway" in Concrete Plant Park, the Bronx in 2017. The "foodway" is the first time New York City Parks is allowing people to publicly forage in over 100 years.

Mattingly recently completed a two-part sculpture “Pull” for the International Havana Biennial with the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes de la Habana and the Bronx Museum of the Arts, two spherical ecosystems that were pulled across Habana to Parque Central and the museum. In 2018 she received a commission from BRIC Arts Media to build "What Happens After" which involved dismantling a military vehicle (LMTV) that had been to Afghanistan and deconstructing its mineral supply chain. A group of artists including performance artists, veterans, and public space activists re-envisioned the vehicle for BRIC. In 2016 Mattingly led a similar project at the Museum of Modern Art. In 2009 Mattingly founded the Waterpod Project, a barge-based public space and self-sufficient habitat that hosted over 200,000 visitors in New York. In 2014, an artist residency on the water called WetLand launched in Philadelphia and traveled to the Parrish Museum.

Her work has also been exhibited at Storm King, the International Center of Photography, the Seoul Art Center, the Brooklyn Museum, the New York Public Library, deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, and the Palais de Tokyo. Her work has been included in books such as the Whitechapel/MIT Press Documents of Contemporary Art series titled “Nature” and edited by Jeffrey Kastner, Triple Canopy’s Speculations, the Future Is... published by Artbook, and Henry Sayre’s A World of Art, 8th edition, published by Pearson Education Inc.










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