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Tavares Strachan
The
Distance Between What We Have and What We Want
(Arctic Ice Project), 2004-06
Scroll down for images and press release

Installation View:
Nassau, Bahamas, July 2006

Planting of the artist's
flag in Alaska

Raising of the artist's flag at the installation site in Nassau, Bahamas,
July 2006
In March 2005 Strachan traveled to the
Alaskan Arctic in search of a frozen river. Within several days he located
one under the Arctic Circle. With the help of a skilled team, he cut into
the river to extract a 4.5 ton portion, which is now stored in Alaska.
This block of ice will be shipped to Nassau, Bahamas for exhibition in
July 2006, an extremely hot summer month in the Bahamas. The ice will
sit in a glass freezer, which will derive its power from a solar energy
system. In effect, the power of the sun will keep this remnant of the
Arctic intact, stable, and on view in the Caribbean. After this the work
will travel for further exhibitions.
Strachan’s work in general, and the Arctic Ice Project in particular,
touches on many different issues: environmental, geographical, social,
cultural, and historical. Perhaps the most obvious reference is environmental,
relating to global warming and the recent recognition (or denial) of current
and potential climactic changes—the reality and the politics of
global warming. Geographically and culturally, the work references multiple
levels of displacement that draw on human experience. Socially, Strachan
has been working to involve communities of school children in the Bahamas
through lectures, the tradition of oral story telling, and performances.
The act of retracing this expedition is a way of imbedding this arctic
experience into the imagination of the community. Using phenomena as a
vehicle, this project involves systems of myth, and the products of these
experiences are the basis for Strachan’s new works that will be
incorporated into later exhibitions.
In this work, Strachan suggests that opposites, or extremes, are necessary
for each other’s survival. Ice on the surface of the Arctic Regions
helps to maintain the Earth’s warm climate, and heat helps keep
ice frozen. “The gist of the project is to actually bring the frozen
north and the hot tropics into contact, to demonstrate that they are contrasting
halves of a single entity, and to then utilize the heat and light energy
of the South to maintain the exact opposite condition of sub-zero temperatures.
The first part of the project is about the conceptual notion of ice and
heat as the poles of our environment; the second part is about the miracles
of technology, which can use one extreme of temperature to produce the
other.” (Richard Benson: Dean, Yale University and School of Art)
This project also proposes a battle against the effects of entropy. It
is a displacement that references the work of Robert Smithson, Gordon
Matta Clark, and more recently Ólafur Elíasson in an April
2006 exhibition. Strachan’s ideas go beyond the forcible displacement
of the ice to a remote location, however. He is concerned with how physical
space displacement changes our reality. From sculpting an invisible cube
of heat, or listening to the sound of an ant walking, to re-creating the
light conditions of one part of the world in another, Strachan’s
propositions are engrossed with the presence of things physically missing
or immediately distant. What is physically present becomes dematerialized
and reappears as a collision between technology and the natural world.
Tavares Strachan was born in the Bahamas. He holds a BFA from the Rhode
Island School of Design and an MFA from Yale University.
Ice extraction views
(Alaska), above and below


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