Gina Siepel

Gina Siepel

  • Projects/Installations
    • To Understand a Tree (ongoing)
      • Tree and Site
      • Participants and Public Engagement
      • Green Woodworking
    • Living Material
    • FOREST-BODY-CHAIR
    • Cycle of Self-Determination
    • SELF-MADE
    • Chair and Tree Studies
    • Re-Surveying Walden
    • New World Reconsidered
    • The Versatile Queer-All
    • 1 x 1
    • A River Twice
    • The Boy Mechanic Project
    • The Coracles of Pignut Pond
    • The Candidate is Absent
    • CACOPHONY
    • Audubon's Birds
    • Portrait of Audubon
    • After Winslow Homer
    • Emma's Walk
    • King Philip Was a Warrior Bold...
    • Historic Site
    • Recursions
  • About
  • CV
  • Selected Press
    • "Self-Made, Gina Siepel’s queer coming-of-age story at Vox Populi Gallery," by Levi Bentley, ArtBlog Philadelphia, 2018
    • "Gina Siepel's Listening Trips," by Jacqueline Gleisner, Art21 Magazine, 2016
    • "To Understand a Tree: An Environmental Art Piece by Gina Siepel," by Shira Zaid, "The Sophian," 2020
    • "Gina Siepel: The Artist as Explorer," by Lauren Lessing, "Currents 6" exhibition catalog essay, Colby College Museum of Art, 2010
    • "Gina Siepel: Currents 6," by Carl Little, Art New England, 2011
  • Contact
A River Twice
2010
video still

Project Overview


This interdisciplinary sculpture, performance and video project explores the entanglement of nature and society on the Kennebec River in Maine. In this piece, I sought the guidance of others who held particular knowledge of the river, and traveled with these “Project Guides” for a day in a boat I built for this purpose. Project Guides held different perspectives on the river, and included a campground owner, an historian, an octogenarian environmental activist and fisherman, one of the state's only woman Registered Maine Guides, a philosopher, a fiddler, and a literature scholar. The collaborative and contextual methodology was employed to challenge the modernist idea of the artist as a solo agent of invention and action, and to challenge the individualistic basis of American human/nature relations.


The project title is inspired by the Greek philosopher Heraclitus' observation that one "cannot step in the same river twice." That is, one’s understanding of a place is an accumulation of contingencies—the perspectives of the people there, the shifting nature of the site’s ecosystemic and physical properties, and the method of interacting with it.




All images and text copyright 2006-2022 Gina Siepel. All rights reserved.

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