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
New World Reconsidered
2020
Multi-media installation

This multi-media installation included works from To Understand a Tree, Audubon’s Birds, and the video Motion Study: American Dream, and was presented at the Mazmanian Gallery at Framingham State University in February 2020. In the context of environmental crisis and a critical consideration of settler-colonial American legacies, the works included reflect the artist’s lifelong engagement with nature and the built environment of the American northeast. Rooted in a contemplative mindset, the exhibit sought to ask, what is it to look honestly, critically, and authentically at the American landscape?


Videos were shot at a variety of locations, including the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge in central New York State, a second-growth mixed deciduous forest in western Massachusetts, and a section of the Northeast corridor from the window of a passenger train. Audubon’s Birds investigates the legacy of naturalist and artist John James Audubon, with drawings of taxidermied bird specimens that once belonged to him. To Understand a Tree is an ongoing multimedia installation work that explores the complex, politicized interrelationship of wooden furniture production and the North American forest.

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

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