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
Installation Image, with "Chair Study: Becoming," "Carbon Study," "To Understand a Tree (Time)"
2022

This interrelated group of artworks was inspired by material connections between the forest, the wooden chair, and the carbon cycle. Carbon exhaled by animals and humans, and released by the burning of all fuels, is taken up and sequestered in the wood of trees. The tree can be cut by humans, and made into a functional chair (or any other object). The video depicts a one-year life cycle, shot in weekly increments, of the red oak tree centered in To Understand a Tree, and the chair is made from the wood of a different fallen tree of the same species. This suite of works is rooted in contemplation of processes of becoming and unbecoming: artistic, embodied, and material, viewed against a backdrop of global climate change.


These works were included in the group exhibition "Becoming Trees," curated by Fritz Horstman, at the Concord Center for the Visual Arts in Concord MA, Spring 2022.

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

An Icompendium Site