2019 Artists in Residence
As we celebrate the 10th season of hosting the Voices of the Wilderness, Artists in Residence Program, we excitedly present to you this year's artists.
Nellie Juan-College Fiord Wilderness Study Area
Chugach National Forest
US Forest Service
VALISA HIGMAN | Paper artist from Seldovia, AK
“The opportunity to visit Prince William Sound, to see its tidewater glaciers and seals on icebergs felt like one of those ‘catch it before its gone’ moments. I wanted to burn the image into my mind, of calving glaciers making salt water wakes; the exact shades of blue of the ancient ice; the sculptural shapes of icebergs melting as they drifted away on the tide. I wanted to appreciate it now before it was gone, make it familiar. It is hard not to think of change when I think of my time in Prince William Sound. The icy landscape has somehow existed past the ice age into our lifetimes, a holdout against the march of time. How long before the tidewater glacier is extinct? I take a moment to appreciate the gravity of that."
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Tebenkof Bay Wilderness
Tongass National Forest
US Forest Service
JENNIFER SONNE | Oil painter from Anchorage, AK
“I spent 8 days kayaking deep within the uninhabited Tebenkof Bay Wilderness in the Tongass National Forest of Southeast Alaska, where I was sensorially inspired by what I saw, heard, smelled, and felt emotionally. I was surprised to be inspired by the sounds of the wilderness area as much as the sights. I heard sea otters munching, whales breathing, and seals splashing. Prior to this experience, I had not spent time with my environment at such a pace that allowed me to truly experience my surroundings. Neither had I ever been able to paint from my memory and feelings as I have in the months since leaving Tebenkof Bay. It has completely changed my perspective on how I process my surroundings. Now I am working on creating an experience of the seclusion and grandeur through my paintings.”
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West Chichagof Wilderness Area
Tongass National Forest
US Forest Service
CECIL HOWELL | Visual Collage artist from Brooklyn, NY
“What struck me most powerfully throughout our 10-day kayaking trip, was the intensity of life found in the Tongass National Forest; my brief exposure to the West Chichagof wilderness was saturated with salmon, whales, eagles, sea lions, towering trees, and fungi. It is a place of expansive beauty, where the human form is lost within the grandeur of nonhuman life. We spent our days kayaking the tightly articulated bays and islands of the outer archipelago (which become mudflats and peninsulas with the tide), looking for traces of human impact. While we found relatively little signs of humans visiting the islands, we did find an abundance of human trash. The experience changed the way I look at waste as well as conceptually expanded my understanding of wilderness."
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Arctic Wilderness
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
US Fish & Wildlife Service
MICHAEL BOARDMAN | Painter/Illustrator from North Yarmouth, ME
“Being selected as this year’s VOTW artist for Arctic was the fulfillment of a lifelong dream to explore the crown jewel of Alaska’s NWR system, a piece of protected land big enough to encompass an entire undisturbed ecosystem. I was stationed at the Canning River Bird Camp, working with ornithologists to record breeding birds nesting on the arctic plain. These birds migrate from far and wide to take advantage of the 24 hour daylight, endless food supply (bugs) and most importantly a landscape free of disturbance in which to lay eggs and raise their chicks. Most of them migrate to the arctic through the lower 48, and I was able to sketch several shorebird species that migrate through my home state of Maine, connecting us to the refuge and what happens there."
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Innoko Wilderness
Innoko National Wildlife Refuge
US Fish & Wildlife Service
ROBERT WINFREE | Multi-media artist from Anchorage, AK
“My two-week field residency with the US Fish and Wildlife Service, at Koyukuk/Nowitna/Innoko National Wildlife Refuge, was more than I could have imagined. My host, Karin Lehmkuhl Bodony, organized a fast-paced itinerary, traveling by motor boat, float plane, canoe, kayak, and on foot through remote “bush” Alaska. Two round-trips in float-planes necessitated aircraft safety training. Otherwise, I might have missed out on hiking across Nogahabara Sand Dunes and kayaking at the Innoko Field Camp (the subject material for my painting). My residency started with a motorized boat trip, 50 miles up Alaska’s Yukon River to the village of Ruby, where we offloaded our canoe to start an awe-inspiring 3-day downriver paddle to Galena. The hospitality of using private cabins each night provided time for paddling, exploring, and rest and protection from insects, large animals and the occasional rip-roaring thunder storms."
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Togiak Wilderness
Togiak National Wildlife Refuge and Wilderness
US Fish & Wildlife Service
MARA MENAHAN | Painter and Illustrator from Helena, MT
"Only accessible by plane, boat or a long overland journey by foot, the Togiak Wilderness is remote. After a month of traveling throughout the refuge—flying from the Akhun glaciers to the coastal estuaries, floating down the Togiak river, walking the shoreline of the Bering Sea—I began to see the Togiak wilderness less as an isolated landscape and more as a place intimately tied to people. From indigenous coastal communities to the fishing town of Dillingham, people hunt, forage and recreate on the land. At the same time, the impacts of people who have never set foot in the refuge, people living hundreds and thousands of miles away, and people who are no longer living, are felt in subtle and heartbreaking ways. I am inspired by the scientists, land managers, fishermen, and families who build their lives within this landscape and are carefully observing changes to the non-human world. As an artist interested in documenting these changes, I felt an immediate sense of community with the people I met during my residency. I am grateful to the staff of Togiak NWR, especially pilot and biologist Kara Hilwig who took me under her wing and generously shared her aerial perspective with me."
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