Silent Scream - Painting by Julia Becker

Julia Becker-Body of Land

  • Paris Gibson Museum of Art
  • November 28 2021

In Participation with
EXTRACTION:
Art on the Edge of the Abyss

a project of the Codex Foundation

Main image: Silent Scream, 2018, Monoprint, Acrylic and ink on Yupo paper, 20 x 26 inches

Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art invites Julia Becker, a recognized multimedia artist, and professor of fine art at University of Providence in Great Falls to present a solo exhibition titled Body of Land. Becker’s exhibition is a multi-layered experience which participates in and responds to EXTRACTION: Art on the Edge of the Abyss, a cross-border multimedia environmental intervention and project of the Codex Foundation. Becker and the museum are pleased to take part in the EXTRACTION movement via the direction of Curator of Exhibitions and Collections Nicole Maria Evans.

EXTRACTION: Art on the Edge of the Abyss, is an event created by collaborators and founders Peter Koch, Edwin Charles Dobb (1950-2019), and Sam Pelts, which is taking place throughout 2021. Their passion and knowledge about global environmental matters and an understanding that art moves people toward action was the impetus for its creation. Montana art museums, galleries and art spaces are specifically engaged in this project because of Peter Koch’s and Edwin Dobb’s deep connection to Montana.

 

 

 

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Agriculture and War, 2016 -2018, Digital Manipulation, Printed in various sizes, Image taken from artist’s original watercolor/drawing, 20 x 15 inches, Hardback codex book on Rives BFK paper.

Koch was born in Missoula with a strong family history in the state; he is a letterpress printer, bookmaker, writer and founder of the Codex Foundation. Dobb was an environmental journalist and photographer for National Geographic who made Butte his home. Together they conceived of this project in 2019 and viewed Montana as a place dear to them and of immediate concern regarding environmental problems. This is a collaborative, community-driven, international movement which brings together artists, curators, writers, dancers, performers, musicians, photographers and filmmakers along with over 50 museums, galleries and public performance spaces worldwide to address a single theme: the consumption of the planet’s natural resources, which is the most pressing environmental issue of our time, encompassing all others, including climate change.

Body of Land, at Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art, will showcase the result of Julia Becker’s inquiry and work for her project. Video documentation of her body ritual movements, which are site-driven, will be incorporated into an installation in the gallery space with the inclusion of Becker’s artist books and paintings/monoprints. Julia Becker maps out the bodily experience within the landscape. Her work is informed by research in topography, neurology and ecology and is focused on the impact industry has on the land we live on and the bodies we live in.

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Emergency Shelter, 2016-2018, Digital Manipulation, Printed in various sizes, Image taken from artist’s original mixed media watercolor/drawing, 20 x 15 inches, Hardback codex book on Rives BFK paper.

“As a 63-year-old, I trust my process, my deep knowing, my life experience and inclinations. When the EXTRACTION project was brought to my attention, I was inspired to look through decades of work considering the concepts presented and found this vein deep in my life’s work. Having grown up next to what is now a Superfund site, a chemical dump in the middle of Cincinnati, and our family farm where I indulged in quiet time within nature, I was aware of conflicts man-made and natural as a young child. Eventually, I traveled the world with open eyes, taking it all in, and working jobs at the interface (wildlands fire fighter, gardener/farmer, wilderness ranger and trail crew, landscaper for a company who did mine restoration). As a youngster, I made my way to Montana after hiking the Appalachian trail from Virginia to Maine and in desperate need for a long solo walk, in nature, to experience deep Wilderness. Eventually I worked for the Bureau of Land Management and the United States Forest Service in the Wilderness. I did this after studying wilderness ecology in Missoula in the late 1970s with amazing professors in an interdisciplinary program “Wilderness and Civilization”. Through my many pursuits, I continued to write poetry and create art every day as that has always been my nature.

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Great Falsetto, 2016, Digital Collage. Printed in various sizes. Layered images taken from artist’s original watercolor drawings and other digital images.

“Body of Land involves an inquiry into the local landscape where industry happens, people live and wild nature convene. The great Missouri River and the ancient cottonwoods that stand in its pathway; the dams and their effects on currents, flow, animal life and migration, health, and safety; the toxic dumps and history of dumping into our water veins and arteries; abandoned structures of past exploitation and ravishes of the topography; power lines across every rise of land stirring images of Golgotha. The skeletons and bones of the land.” – Julia Becker, 2021

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Julia Becker, Untitled, 2020, Original watercolor and gouache on paper, 10 x 14 inches


 

 

 

Schedule of Related Events

Exhibition Opens Friday, Aug. 13, 2021

Aug. 27, 2021, 6:00 p.m. Reception and curator’s discussion with the artist; RSVP

Oct. 7, 2021, Online panel discussion with Sam Pelts, founding organizer of EXTRACTION, Julia Becker, the exhibiting artist, and Nicole Maria Evans, curator of exhibitions and collections at The Square. Details at www.the-square.org.

Visit www.the-square.org, or call (406) 727-8255 for further information.

Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art is located at 1400 1st Avenue North, Great Falls, MT.


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