EVENT
Reservoir: What The Water Knows – Exhibition Opening Reception
May 13, 2023
6:00pm–8:00pm
Join us for the opening reception of Reservoir: What the Water Knows curated by Arlinda Shtuni. You will have an opportunity to meet the artists and experience the exhibition while enjoying some light refreshments.
ADMISSION: free of charge; donations of $10 gratefully accepted.
RSVP: Tickets can be reserved online or at the door. Space is limited.
Note: Parking is very limited (20 spaces), so please consider taking public transportation. Reservoir and Cleveland Circle T stops are a short, 10-minute walk from the museum.
Reservoirs nourish and energize our ever-expanding cities. They also safeguard us from extreme weather events and other disasters. As our need for water grows, we have found a myriad of ways to capture, divert, mix and contain free-flowing waters–and store it away. Compactly designed for human use, reservoirs often seem like closed systems. Yet, the water within retains traces of the journey it has made to arrive there–deviated streams, dried river beds, drowned cliffs and submerged towns–profoundly altering habitats and ecosystems and lives in ways we may never fully know.
Reservoir: What the Water Knows presents new and freshly rendered works by six noted local artists that probe our complicated relationship with water. The artists look deeply into how climate warming is impacting us–both from the outside in and the inside out–and inquire: how are our watery bodies registering and responding to these shifts? Ultimately, they remind us of our interdependence in nature and prompt us to contemplate our inner and outer reserves as we move forward.
Participating Artists
A+J Art+Design/ Ann Hirsch and Jeremy Angier
Caitlin & Misha
Heather Kapplow
Nathaniel Price
Nancy Selvage
Ros Zimmermann
Reservoir also showcases a site-specific installation of soundscapes and sound acousmatic works by a group of Northeastern University music students guided by Pr. Hubert Ho. From inviting us to follow the journey of underground water rise to the surface, to letting us meditate near calm waters, and thrusting us into a storm, these aesthetically eclectic pieces respond to the exhibit in myriad ways.
Image: Flood, Nathaniel Price, 2023/23’’ x 23’’ x 23’’ Hydrostone, measuring yardsticks, glue, steel. Photo by Yorgos Efthymiadis.
Current Exhibit
Moving Water: From Ancient Innovations to Modern Challenges
Ancient civilizations engineered water systems that sustained communities for thousands of years. This exhibition spotlights six places that innovated ways to deliver, and control water for human use. It also looks at how climate change is impacting all of those places, forcing public officials to consider new ways to keep the water flowing.