Zoe Li
A Box Life 2020-05

The project visualizes the data of my path in my room for 14 days during the COVID-19 outbreak in NYC. I tracked myself everyday from 10:00am – 10:00pm. The box simulates the space of my room. During the endless quarantine life, the meaning and concept of “space” have changed. My room is a promise of safety, a feeling of security, but also a cage. I dreamed about walking out of this space every night, but I always woke up with fear. I made my efforts to enjoy the limited freedom inside my room, at the same time I was desperate to get away from it. This confined space is no longer only a room for me in this time, it is a cage for security, a box for protection and the summary of my existence.

 

Frank Webster
Melancology (study 1), 2019
watercolor on paper
12″ x 16″

Frank Webster
Melancology (study 4), 2019
watercolor on paper
12″ x 16″

Frank Webster
Melancology (study 3), 2019
watercolor on paper
12″ x 16″

Diana Gongora
Passage of Time (Triptych), 2017
Pastel on Paper,
36″ x 16″

Diana Gongora
Hidden, Don’t Look, 2018
Oil on canvas,
32″ x 32″

Diana Gongora
Protect What Matters, 2018
Oil on canvas,
20″ x 16″

Christopher Lin
Ziggurat, 2020
Cicada moltings, resin, and gold leaf
12″ x 5″ x 5″

Christopher Lin
Untitled (Ephemera), 2018
Glue and milkweek seeds
1″ x 8″ x 5″

Mark Eisendrath
A different story, 2020
Poplar and pigment
20 x 20 x 1.5″

Mark Eisendrath
December in my eyes, 2020
Oak and pigment
36 x 19 x 2″

Marie Ruprecht
TO BE AT HOME IN TIME / DAY & NIGHT, 2020
Indian ink and acrylic on old linen pieces

Kate Stone
Strange Loops (A Gathering Storm in Four Dimensions)
Single-channel video, 3:28 loop

Kate Stone
Strange Loops (A Gathering Storm in Four Dimensions)
Single-channel video, 3:28 loop

Vassilis Vassiliades
The Most Beautiful Music is Written by Silence, 2013
chairs, violin cases, candles

Vassilis Vassiliades
The Most Beautiful Music is Written by Silence, 2013
chairs, violin cases, candles

Tamar Zinn
FERMATA LUNGA 6, 2013 – 2014
Oil on wood panel
15.5 x 14″

Tamar Zinn
FERMATA LUNGA 10, 2013 – 2014
Oil on wood panel
15.5 x 14″

Hibernation

Dec. 18th – Jan. 31st, 2021


Curated by Janet Rutkowski, Izabela Gola, and Jason Clay Lewis

The Royal @ RSOAA is pleased to present, Hibernation a group exhibition curated by Janet Rutkowski, Izabela Gola, and Jason Clay Lewis featuring artists Alberto Marcos Bursztyn, Mark Eisendrath, Diana Gongora, Zoe Li, Christopher Lin, Marie Ruprecht, Kate Stone, Vassilis Vassiliades, Frank Webster, and Tamar Zinn.

Hibernation is the premise of nature’s self defense for many living species to pause against the harshness of winter. Extending it into the human condition, this state of biological pause extends onto another level subdued by environmental anxiety in the times of public health, climate change, and humanitarian crises.

The Royal LIst

Click on the image or artist name to view each individual Artist Profile on The Royal List.

Hibernation, a state of greatly reduced metabolic activity, lowered body temperature, and heart rates slow down, adopted by certain mammals as an adaptation to adverse winter conditions. Hibernation protects the animal from cold and reduces the need for resources during the winter season when food is scarce. It’s the premise of nature’s self defense for many living species to pause against the harshness of winter. A survival mechanism, a force to regeneration, a rebirth.

In a hibernation state, animals rely on the natural environment more than ever. Hibernating in the times of public health, climate change, humanitarian crises, the human condition is subdued by environmental anxiety. We are hugging our ears to the soil in deep sleep and we hear the distant gallop of the four riders of apocalypse, the widening of the ozone hole, the global temperature rising one degree at a time, the melting glaciers under our skin.

The Environmental Protection Agency of the current government administration just announced it would begin the formal process of selling leases to oil companies allowing oil and gas drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. While many reversing actions of the government strive to undermine science, dismantle the major climate policies and roll back rules governing the clean air we breathe, the water we drink, carbon dioxide emissions, wildlife and toxic chemicals, we recuperate, and redefine our purpose. We shed our skin to reach the new light of the spring and a new self.

We are teetering on the brink of the borderline between the dark side, and the bright side, the fears and anxieties, the shadows of the underbelly of our collective psyche and the enlightenment, renaissance we desperately need again. While in the rapid eye movement we still have our nightmares, having our principles and ideals challenged and bastardized, we are slowly approaching the light of the dawn. We do hope with the natural force of resistance under our skin. Nature will always find a way to bring new growth, new life, new hope.