HANCOCK, MI – Finlandia University Gallery will present A Sense of Place: Works from Rabbit Island, an exhibit featuring the collected works of 13 artists who participated in the Rabbit Island Foundation Residency Program. Several short films created on and about Rabbit Island will also be on display. Founded in 2010 by Andrew Ranville and Rob Gorski this residency hosts artists, writers and researchers from a wide variety of disciplines. A Sense of Place: Works from Rabbit Island will be on display at the Finlandia University Gallery, located in the Finnish American Heritage Center, Hancock, from September 20 to October 19, 2018. Exhibited as the Rabbit Island Collection for the first time, the artworks in the exhibition have been donated by former resident artists and collaborators. Beyond highlighting the contributions of artists and contributors to the foundation’s tenets, these works also provides a diverse and detailed portrait of the island.
An opening reception for the public will take place at the gallery on Thursday, September 20th, from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. Co-founder Andrew Ranville and artist Calvin Rocchio, who has recently completed his residency on Rabbit Island will give a talk beginning at 7:20 p.m. The reception is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.
Artist Beau Carey, photo courtesy of Andrew Ranville
Located four miles east of the Keweenaw Peninsula, Rabbit Island is a protected 91 acre wilderness. Since 2013 the Rabbit Island Foundation Residency Program has received approximately 1,000 applications from 37 countries, and has awarded 26 fully supported residencies. Additionally, nearly 60 artistic collaborations have taken place. The program operates between June and September, championing the advancement of artistic and ecological thought.
Rabbit Island Man Camp, photo courtesy of Courtney Michalik Kent
“The residency program is a platform to investigate, expand, and challenge creative practices in this unique environment,” notes co-founder Andrew Ranville. “By living and working on Rabbit Island residents engage directly with the landscape and respond to notions of conservation, ecology, sustainability, and resilience.”
Luce Choules Littoral States, photo courtesy of Andrew Ranville
The Rabbit Island Foundation’s mission statement elaborates, “Rooted in the belief that the intelligent organization and celebration of wild spaces is the most civilized thing we can value as society, the residency reflects on the insights provided by the hundreds of years of settlement and division of land. The island—itself an unsettled and undivided space—enables residents to pursue research and develop work related to these ideas, creating interpretations, and even solutions.”
Calvin Rocchio, an artist from Northern California will soon be finishing his Rabbit Island residency and will be just off the island to share his experiences at the opening reception. “My practice, through what’s accumulated practicing openly and perpetually, amounts to an ecological ontology––a way of being in the world that’s pliable / wavy / soft / permeable,” says Rocchio. Focusing on our relationship to the environment, Rocchio’s prior work has included workshops on how to inhabit outside spaces; gatherings and performative readings across the country at the local sites of environmental debates; and self published essays and open source environmental readers.
Calvin Rocchio Island Talk, photo courtesy of Andrew Ranville
A Sense of Place: Works from Rabbit Islandwill be on display at the Finlandia University Gallery through October 19, 2018. The exhibiting artists are Julieta Aguinaco (Mexico City, Mexico), Beau Carey (Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States), Luce Choules (London, United Kingdom), Sarah Demoen (Brussels, Belgium), Jack Forinash (New Cuyama, California), Kelly Gregory (San Francisco Bay, California, United States), Helen Lovelee (Sydney, Australia), Miles Mattison (Oakland, California and Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States), Josefina Muñoz (Santiago, Chile), Andrew Ranville(London, United Kingdom and Calumet, Michigan, United States), Isabella Rose Martin (United Kingdom/Denmark), Walter van Broekhuizen (Amsterdam, The Netherlands), and Mary Welcome (Palouse, Washington, United States).
The Finlandia University Gallery is in the Finnish American Heritage Center, 435 Quincy Street, Hancock. Gallery hours are Monday to Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. , Thursday 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., Saturday 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
For more information, call 906-487-7500 or email gallery@finlandia.edu
Learn more about this exhibit, other exhibits and the Finlandia University Gallery in general by visiting finlandia.edu/universitygallery.