By Alec Clayton
Published
in the Weekly Volcano, May 31, 2018
"Kelp Forest" reclaimed plastic by Barbara De Pirro, photo courtesy the artist |
Former
Tacoma News Tribune art writer Rosemary Ponnekanti with the help of curator
Lisa Kinoshita has pulled together an amazing arts festival to take Place June
10 at the Foss Waterway Seaport, 705 Dock St., Tacoma. The event called Tacoma
Ocean Fest will feature photography, eco-sculpture, film, dance, music, an
aerial circus, painting, poetry, hands-on marine science for all ages,
paddleboarding and kayaking and more.
“I got the idea (and the first grant) when The News Tribune
cut my job last year, and since then I've been working to bring together some
pretty cool ocean-related art,” Ponnekanti says. “Come celebrate World Ocean
Day weekend with me and help protect our ocean. It's going to be an
amazing festival and I'm working so hard for it, along with a bunch of
talented, generous people.
“As humans, we need to collectively step up to protect our ocean from plastics, chemicals, sound pollution, warming and the rest. I really believe that together we can do it. That's what Ocean Fest is all about.”
“As humans, we need to collectively step up to protect our ocean from plastics, chemicals, sound pollution, warming and the rest. I really believe that together we can do it. That's what Ocean Fest is all about.”
A
major visual art component is Barbara De Pirro’s suspended sculpture “Kelp
Forest.” She used hundreds of reclaimed plastics to create this environmental installation.
She collected, washed, cut and reassembled more than 300 plastic bottles to be
suspended as a mass of kelp forest high within Foss Waterway Seaport Museum, enabling
visitors to walk underneath it's ghostly form, which Ponnekanti describes as
swaying gently above our heads. De
Pirro "makes ethereal beauty out of trash,” Ponnekanti says.
I first discovered De Pirro’s work when she did a Spaceworks
installation called “Vortex Plastica” in 2010. In the eight years since then I
have reviewed her art many times, and I never ceased being overwhelmed with the
otherworldly beauty of it.
Annie Crawly is an underwater
photographer and filmmaker. She will be showing works called “Our
Ocean and You” including photos of whales,
sea lions and octopi, as well as photos of the devastation of plastic trash
strewn on beaches. Crawly will be the keynote speaker at the festival.
Mike Coots is a Hawaiian
photographer and shark advocate who lost a leg to a tiger shark 20 years ago.
He will be showing shark photographs. He has appeared on “National Geographic,”
the “Travel Channel” and is an Instagram sensation.
Ponnekanti says, “The reason I chose these three artists —
other than the clear ocean theme in their work — was how their work encompasses
pure art, journalism and sport. I have been a fan of Barbara's semi-abstract
eco-sculptures for a while. They take materials usually considered debris and
remake them into something imaginative and otherworldly, a reminder that beauty
can come out of anywhere, but also a reminder that as humans we make a lot of
trash and we need to deal with it.”
Other events and performances at Ocean Fest include
performances by cellist Gretchen Yanover, aerilist performances by Deanna
Riley, flamenco dance by Mrisela Fleites, songs by Kim Archer, Tacoma City
Ballet's "Whale Song," and West African dance by Tacoma Urban
Performing Arts Center. And all of that is just a fraction of the art and
entertainment to be enjoyed.
Tacoma
Ocean Fest, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., June 10, Foss
Waterway Seaport, 705 Dock St., Tacoma, free.
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