The Art of Water
The concept is to create “a collaborative space to artistically display how we know water—all water—fresh, brackish, and salt.” And the web site does that with its organization as gallery of exhibits.
The concept is to create “a collaborative space to artistically display how we know water—all water—fresh, brackish, and salt.” And the web site does that with its organization as gallery of exhibits.
Underdone Comics (Seattle) — comics about nature posted most weekdays
David Eisenhower will be participating in a compelling conversation with Dr. Nina Bednarsek Sunday Sept. 13, 2015 at the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art from 3 to 5 PM, where coincidentally he has a breathtaking exhibition of his marine sculptures.
This will be the kind of field guide that paper can’t deliver, a guide that will show you behavior of creatures (video), interactions between creatures instead of a separate page for each one, and so you can keep looking at cool stuff while learning, it can read to you! And the content won’t be just science-y stuff, it’ll also include cultural interpretations: poetry, art, stories, etc.
Gallery show of a group of talented artists whose work honors the natural world and responds to environmental predicaments
I’ll just let this painting speak for itself. It’s at the North Kitsap Heritage Park
Art and science work together to produce an animated look at salmon in different nearshore habitats.
Astonishing sculptures of ocean creatures that are literal, sardonic, and ceremonial, arranged to create the feel of an underwater world.
His new show, “Dialogue with Nature” starts March 22, 2014 at the Bainbridge Museum of Art.
If we listen with our eyes, we can hear the seashore talking. “How do I love thee? Let me count the hearts…”
The way they move is … uncanny! Animated underwater creatures created from household items interact with each other in this short film.