Arts & Entertainment

Construction Time Again Explores A Changing Landscape In BCCC Exhibit

Each work shows the viewer what has happened, what is happening, and what will happen to the environment.

The Hicks Art Gallery on the campus of the Bucks County Community College in Newtown.
The Hicks Art Gallery on the campus of the Bucks County Community College in Newtown. (Bucks County Community College)

NEWTOWN, PA — The Bucks County Community College presents a new exhibit, "Construction Time Again," on view through March 8 at the Hicks Art Center Gallery. Through the exhibit, artists and architects creatively respond to social, cultural, architectural, ecological, and environmental sustainability in urban and rural environments.

Named after the title of the 1983 studio album by Depeche Mode of the same name, participating artists and architects employ diverse materials, subjects and medias to address the impacts of construction and demolition on buildings, lands and people over periods of time in numerous locales.

As the lyrics of Depeche Mode’s song, “The Landscape Is Changing” decry, “Now we’re re- arranging, There’s no use denying, Mountains and valleys, can’t you hear them sighing,” the objects and works in the exhibition challenge the viewer to evaluate their collective responses and responsibilities to outcomes of their presence on Earth and to seek new ways of sustainable resourcefulness.

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"As a basis to the exhibition, seeing through filters of air, water and traceries of building sites is vital to interpreting what is constantly changing in the environments that surround us," said exhibit organizers. "But what are the nuances of perspective when atmosphere, distance and other phenomena are constantly mediating our vision both indoors and outside?"

Artist Gwen Kerber’s floor installation serves as a launchpad to visualize how to perceive not only the natural world, but also built environments. Using grids, color and vantage, Kerber’s “Wading; Field of Vision Looking Down at a 45 Degree Angle from About Two Feet Away” brings the viewer closer to their bodies’ limits, depths, and confines.

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“End-of-Days and Workers Wake Up” installation view

Arden Bendler Browning’s AR video/painting works collide gestural, seemingly abstract paintings with buildings and landscapes that take the viewer on mesmerizing journeys through moving colors overlayed on and woven through familiar and wild sites.

Like Kerber, Bendler Browning uses vision and sight as tools to convince the viewers that the act of observing is imperative to comprehending movements of their surroundings that could be life-threatening or affirming.

With Kerber’s and Bendler Browning’s works addressing the tasks of perception acknowledging change, Diane Burko’s diptych, “Deforestation 1 and Deforestation 2” confronts the fact of the Amazon’s rapidly diminishing natural filter that prolongs life on earth head on.

With the encircled word “Deforestation” on one fiery panel hung next to another depicting a cropped map of South America with the Amazon outlined in the same white as the circle on the opposite panel, the viewer has no escape from being implicated as holding great responsibility to environmental cataclysm through the proliferation of fossil fuels and corporate greed.

Borrowed from the Museum for Art in Wood, Jean-François Delorme’s mixed media sculpture, “Broken,” is the artist’s personal narrative of his body suffering a fall and a material also breaking apart but still maintaining perfection. In the exhibition context, the upturned crutches and breaking sphere represent the Earth being barely held up in space while breaking apart — a macabre warning.

Around 358,500 accidental fires in urban areas occur every year. The aftermath is not always documented or publicized.

After a fire destroyed property that her father owns, Deborah Riccardi’s family banded together to fight the local government that surreptitiously issued eminent domain over the building and land in Ambler. Deborah and her sister photographed her father in the devastated buildings along with the surrounding property and some of the images are on view in the exhibition.

The Riccardi’s meticulously sorted the debris and recycled as much as they possibly could, reducing the environmental impact on not only the immediate vicinity but in the local landfill.

"Architects are essential to make new and renovated buildings environmentally sustainable while using building materials that do not add as much greenhouse gas emissions or use an overabundance of water such as the production of concrete," said organizers. "One highly revered architectural firm that believes in designing buildings that are not only beautifully designed for public interaction but also demonstrations of sustainability is Frederick Fisher and Partners."

Videos and printed plans documenting several of their exemplary projects such as the renovation and rebuilding of the Santa Monica City Hall and the rehabilitation of Guyot Hall at Princeton University are featured in the exhibition.

Another artist in the exhibition addressing architecture, however from a more localized sociological and historical lens, is Nicolo Gentile. Parts of his sculptures were fabricated using melted down metals from a building, now demolished, that once housed the 12th Street Gym in Philadelphia, which was vital to the gay community as a hub promoting health and well-being. Now, Gentile’s sculptures are almost all that is left as physical memories of an important community gathering spot.

Depletion of natural resources is one of the central themes in Kristen Neville Taylor’s recent body of work, “End of Days.” With personal ties to glass production and installation, her father worked as a glazier, Taylor’s pate de verre’s, videos, and sculptures reveal myths and lore around the evolution of the sand mines of the New Jersey Pine Barrens that are mostly vanished except for massive lakes of blue water that appear to be natural.

The Bucks County Historic Association’s Mercer Museum generously allowed Hicks Art Center Gallery to borrow two objects that were once used to pump and to channel water: one from the earth and one from a barrel. From a curatorial perspective, it is important to include such objects in an exhibition such as this to historicize the industrialization of the extraction of natural resources, especially water.

While all the artists, architects and museum as well as their objects and projects in “Construction Time Again” are very different in appearance, each are examples showing the viewer what has happened, what is happening, and what will happen to the environment in a collective effort to help all see how they can keep the Earth a place that is habitable for many generations to come — not just a few.

The Hicks Art Center Gallery is located on the Bucks County Community College’s Newtown Campus at 275 Swamp Road, Newtown 18940. Gallery hours are Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturdays from noon to 4 p.m.

For more information, visit www.hicksgallery.bucks.edu and follow on Instagram @bcccartscomm.


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