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Art inspired by Yellowstone National Park exhibited at Yellowstone Art Museum in Billings

in Yellowstone
Art inspired by Yellowstone National Park exhibited at Yellowstone Art Museum in Billings

This watercolor by Thomas Moran inspired by the springs at the Firehole River will be on display at the Yellowstone Art Museum. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL PARKS CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION

Outlaw Partnersby Outlaw Partners
April 11, 2017

 

YELLOWSTONE ART MUSEUM

This past March, the Yellowstone Art Museum unveiled a new installation by a Brazilian-born artist now based in Boulder, Colorado. The installation of “Archaea: Rosane Volchan O’Conor” is a fusion of artist Rosane O’Conor’s interests in biology, music and the visual arts.

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Educated at the Escola de Musica Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro and the Royal Academy of Music in Brussels, O’Conor moved to Boulder in 2011, drawn by the city’s cultural, educational and outdoor offerings. “Archaea” alludes directly to the unique history of the Yellowstone Caldera’s history and micro-biome. Archaea are microscopic organisms that survive in extreme environments. They were first studied in Yellowstone National Park, where they are responsible for the magnificent coloration of the famed Morning Glory hot spring.

O’Conor’s installation draws from the biomorphic forms of this branch of scientific inquiry as well as the intense coloration of the geyser basins. Her immersive installation is suggestive of biological forms crawling off the walls, hanging crystalized in space, and mutating into clusters across the floor. Using welded metal wire, torch-bent glass and neon, acrylic, paper, Mylar, porcelain and other conventional and unconventional materials, O’Conor creates a miniature universe.

“Paracentrotus,” a work by Rosane Volchan O’Conor on display at the Yellowstone Art Museum in Billings, Montana, through Aug 6. PHOTO COURTESY OF ROSANE VOLCHAN O’CONOR
“Paracentrotus,” a work by Rosane Volchan O’Conor on display at the Yellowstone Art Museum in Billings, Montana, through Aug 6. PHOTO COURTESY OF ROSANE VOLCHAN O’CONOR

To stand within this installation is to discover a bustling, interconnected world of microorganisms existing independent of the laws of scientific reality. The environment is at once chaotic and harmonious, expansive, and intricate. O’Conor’s prints, which underscore her Brazilian heritage, will also be featured. These works not only clarify the artist’s sculptural vision, but draw from a long tradition of decorative forms that are imbued with intense color and bold compositions and design. The prints align the descriptive aspects of scientific drawing with the spirit of twenty-first century curiosity.

O’Conor is not the first—and will not be the last—artist to be inspired by the profound beauty of Yellowstone National Park. However, her unique visual, musical and scientific interests blend into a visual symphony that is enigmatic, intriguing and beautiful to behold.

As an adjunct to the exhibition, the museum is privileged to exhibit three historic watercolors by Thomas Moran that stem from the Hayden Expedition of 1871. These works are on loan courtesy of the National Park Service. Visitors will have a unique opportunity to compare the differing approaches that these artists have taken when interpreting the subject of one of the nation’s most beloved parks.

The English artist Thomas Moran (1837-1926) was the first professionally trained artist to paint extensively in what would become Yellowstone National Park. Moran signed on as expedition artist with Ferdinand Hayden’s U.S. Geological Survey. Photographer William Henry Jackson also accompanied this expedition and the two of them created the first, and some of the most lasting, images of Yellowstone. Moran’s intensely colored paintings and sketches were greeted in the East with skepticism, but eventually his work was credited with helping to persuade the federal government to create the world’s first national park in 1872.

O’Conor’s installation and Thomas Moran’s watercolors will be on view from March 23 through Aug. 6, and a public reception was held at the museum on March 23rd.

For more information about this and other current exhibitions, visit artmuseum.org, or call (406) 256-6804.

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