Remnants II

I enjoy jumping back and forth between the micro and macro view of the land we live on. My micro view can be seen in these bodies/installations of work: Remnants I was created in early 2011, which documents the decaying greenhouses on Vashon Island. Remnants I was presented at the Blue Heron Art Gallery on Vashon Island in March 2011 and at VERMILLION Gallery on Capitol Hill in Seattle in June 2011. Remnants II was created in July and the first days of August 2011 and was exhibited at VALISE gallery on Vashon Island during the month of August in an exhibition entitled Special Relativity.

Below are installation shots as you walk thru the installation followed by images of the prints mounted behind reclaimed greenhouse window panes. The prints are ink jet prints transferred to watercolor paper, 16”x18”, 2011.

My goal as an artist has always been to create work that shines light on environmental issues, to try to make a difference while there is still time. Now, as a mother, I feel even more driven towards that goal. When I moved to this beautiful island four years ago, it appeared to be an idyllic place to live and raise a family. Yet over time, more and more has been revealed to me to show that several environmental issues exist here. It’s hard for me to go thru each day without thinking about at least one of them.

When my daughter plays in the dirt or when I garden or buy produce grown on Maury Island I think of the arsenic and lead contamination caused by the former ASARCO Copper Smelter near Tacoma. Based on a brochure  I received in the mail a few years ago, where I live on Maury Island, the arsenic contamination is noted to be “greater than 200ppm”, which is one level below being considered a Superfund site. (Model Toxics Control Act (MTCA) cleanup levels for unrestricted land use: Arsenic = 20ppm)

When we walk around or play in Quartermaster Harbor I think of the fact that over half of the harbor's shoreline is permanently closed to (shellfish) harvesting due to pollution, according to The Beachcomber. This pollution is caused partly by failing or non-existent septic tanks that are leaking waste into the waters in and around our Island.

When I drive to the grocery store or Vashon town I pass the Harrington Beall Greenhouses, the fascinating, abandoned 17-acre site that once housed the Western Hemisphere's largest commercial greenhouse complex. This site requires and awaits the cleanup of pesticides, Bunker C oil, metals and asbestos in the soil.

And just until recently, whenever I heard a gravel truck pass by our place (which was about one per hour), I thought of the Glacier Northwest gravel mine just up the road from us. Glacier proposed to expand their operation to become the largest gravel mine of its kind, which would have devastated the shoreline, wildlife, one of the largest Madrone forests in the US, and the drinking water supply of many people on Maury Island. 

As much as I struggle with this knowledge each day, it is reassuring to know that steps are currently being taken to address some of these environmental issues on Vashon/Maury Island.

A huge settlement from ASARCO is being used for an extensive public outreach and education campaign, as well as to address the 1000 square mile area of contaminated soil in our region, which includes our island.  (In my research I found that ASARCO is responsible for the largest environmental bankruptcy in U.S. history, and is responsible for sites around the country that are contaminated with hazardous waste.)

The Glacier Northwest gravel mine was recently prevented from expanding and closed. King County purchased the 250-acre site with a combination of state, county and private funds, including $14.5 million from the ASARCO settlement.

According to the Seattle Times,"…(in June) state and local officials released a plan for more inspections and enforcement on all (pollution) fronts, including septic tanks, livestock operations, small hobby farms, dairies and other pollution points) (in Puget Sound), as well as more education and help for landowners."

Public information has been developed by the State of Washington Department of Ecology  and by King County Public Health, such as “What to do if you have a septic system failure”.

Finally, the King County Brownfields Program conducted an environmental assessment of the Harrington-Beall Greenhouse site in 2006. The assessment identifies environmental conditions on the property and provides remedial options and alternatives for abatement.

My exhibition aims to help keep the dialogue open about these issues so that we all can be aware of and/or work on them. It is hard for me to talk about these issues knowing that we all, myself included, are part of the problem. Each one of us can make positive choices each day and be a part of the solution. I have come to love living on Vashon and am excited to raise my children here. I just want it to be a truly idyllic place for them, not just a facade.

Previous
Previous

Remnants I

Next
Next

Spilling Over