Spring Cometh

As the ice goes out and the mountains snows flow into Lake Champlain, our thoughts turn to warmer seasons and planning for summer fun in our active watershed. We also know that the cyanobacteria blooms in & around North Hero were bad last year and so appreciate the work LLC has done to educate us on this condition. This lake that joins us holds both our past and our future. How we cherish this place and build healing strategies will take all of us, working together, at multiple levels.

Nebi: Abenaki Ways of Knowing Water

We have added this 10min. film (below) thanks to the chiefs and members of the Nulhegan, Missisquoi, and Elnu Bands of the Abenaki Nation, and Peregrine Productions, Lake Champlain Committee (LLC), Lake Champlain Sea Grant and UVM Extension.

20210321_121244.jpg

Great Ice - North Hero

Great Ice days are here finally as a “mini-fest” for locals — this means skating and skiing with Covid-safety rules , i.e., no big group activities like bonfire, fireworks, or vendors. Some of us have been to Knights Island twice already to check out the ice and snow conditions. There is a small oval and a hockey rink. And it looks like the Over & Back ski to Knights Island will Sunday for some of us — it will be the sunnier day of another cold weekend. Added fun is the First-year Anniversary of Kraemer & Kin, brewery and tasting room at GreenTARA.

Winter Light

We are held in time and place, not only by winter and the beauty that surrounds us, but by the transitions in our political and social environments. We are well aware of new hopes in our government and rising trust of vaccines, but still it will take all of us to believe in our better selves to have these scattered seeds sprout into solidly rooted plants.

Transition: Turning the Wheel thru Time and Place

Turning the wheel, we rotate, change view, transform from chrysalis to butterfly, we transition from formation, from immanent being into active flying beauty. Turning the wheel, we rotate, change direction, transform from enclosed to free, transition from afraid into wing-spread strength, rising into air, layer upon layer, for the long-journey ahead.

Starting a new year - 2021

As we start this new year, I suspect we are all full of expectations for 2021. Full of hopes for our friends and family, of resolutions to help make this a better, more just, world, but also maybe a little bit tired of hiding behind a mask!

Given that the political and Covid-19 pandemics are not exactly over, this new year will need our collective vision and hard work to bring it forward. We cannot come out of a global pandemic and economic shut-down without thinking that hard work is ahead of us, for all of us. The virus has shown us how intricately involved our (political, environmental, social, and economical) lives are here and across the globe. We will need to rebuild community networks—they are the basis for trust across boundaries, as well as, economic integration. This will not happen by chance or by luck, but by plowing ahead with grit and heart. It will be a year full of resolution, compassion, and endurance.

To this end, the Gallery plans for art and environment exhibitions with associated workshops (via Zoom) are underway and the co-location of local-brewery Kraemer & Kin (with great food) at GreenTARA will continue.

I send heartfelt thanks to all of you and much joy as we begin to care for all sentient beings, as well as ourselves, in this new year.

Mandala by Melissa Forbes - please check for future workshops. http://www.forbesyantra.com

Mandala by Melissa Forbes - please check for future workshops. http://www.forbesyantra.com

Giving thanks, November.

I love November — it is a time of early dark, wild sunsets, twinkly lights, and sitting by the fire… it is a time of quieting down the busy harvest spirit and yet not quite the dream time of deep winter.

Going forward please be aware of two things: 1) due to rise in Covid-19 illness numbers, Kraemer & Kin are no longer serving locally-crafted brews, but they are still open for retails sales, and 2) Migrations Sarah Ashe’s work in mixed-media and acrylic comes down in another week, i.e., Sunday Nov 22 is the last day to visit her work. Hours per K &K : F, S, S 12 - 6pm.

kwanjyin.jpg

Our changing season: November's here!

October full moon and Halloween lead to November snows, but this year the Gallery is still OPEN… with Kraemer & Kin hosting. Such a pleasure to know that in uncertain times (Covid-19, national elections, hurricanes, closed-down borders…) community connections can still be vibrant. And Sarah Ashe’s work Migrations is in the Gallery thru Sunday Nov 22 — such a special voice. Best to everyone, miss you!

Migrations - current show

Migrations

Earth not so much migrates around the sun as she rotates in a given trajectory, and with this transit through the skies, we gain a broader view of our universe.

I believe the notion of migration is deeply embedded in us.  In looking to Geology, we find the massive shifting of continental plates millions of years ago forming Earth as we know her today.  So I ask: Is this not a shape-shifting migration of Earth’s crust?

History tells us of many migrations, across time and place, starting with the exodus from the Great African Rift Valley through numerous and subsequent migrations—both human and animal—forming the populations we are and the others we depend on.

Migrations occur at differing scales and for varying reasons.  For example, we are comfortable with the migrating birds through our landscape; the Sami and the Nenet depend on caribou migrations for their livelihood; and the fishing industry follows the movement of species in the oceans, but when it comes to the movement of people through our territory we get defensive and, even go so far as constructing physical and legal walls—castle walls, the Berlin Wall, the Great Wall of China, US immigration policies, and more.

Human history is fraught with population growth and movement, expansion and contraction of resources, political exoduses, and economic migrations. We know these causes and impacts—the socio-political ravages and violence of war such as caused the recent exodus of Syrian refugees or the Ruhingas pushed out of Myanmar and into Bangladesh; the environmental catastrophes of volcanic activity, drought, forest fires, flooding, tsunamis, and hurricanes which caused the displacement of hundreds of poor from their shorelands due to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami or the ongoing drought and flooding in south Sudan affecting millions; and of course, the global economic forces of the neo-liberal policies such as the US promulgated “shock doctrine” in South and Central America whose outcome is now being felt on the USA/Mexico border.

We can study these things, calculate and measure them, but to feel the turmoil, fear, anger, pain, suffering, and see the deaths that ensue in each case is heart-breaking.   This is where Sarah Ashe’s work brings us.  Her paintings and sculptures move us from the UN reports and news accounts to the visual and tactile. 

The paintings are visceral with colour and emotion while portraying a multitude in motion across a landscape or sea.  The sculptures are small and seemingly fragile like a little bundle of life in a boat at the edge of collapse.  And her experience of living in New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina happened is not lost.  Together they harness the light in the Gallery to transform our imagination and awaken our awareness of being alive.

Migrations: Hanging the show with artist Sarah Ashe

The Gallery at GreenTARA Space is happy to host Sarah Ashe’s paintings and sculptures on Migrations. Her art exhibit runs Friday Oct 16 thru Sunday November 22, 2020.

The overall Gallery theme for the fall is EarthFirst and the Migrations show continues our recognition of the power of the Universe and our life in it. We have become a transformative force—however way you want to look at it. In this case, the migration of humans across the globe continues the centuries old drama—one that engages empathy, fear, pain, torment, and joy.

Sarah Ashe: So much of migration today involves enormous risk, courage and desperation… to move with the seasons as part of life’s rhythm is one form… but to have to leave is sadly a reality of our times. It’s the latter that my work focuses on.


GreenTARA Space is now both art exhibit space and local tasting room for Kraemer & Kin island brewery. Hours to visit the art or craft brews are F, S, S noon to 6pm. For more information about art please visit us online or contact GreenTARA Gallery. For Kraemer & Kin local brewery and community activities, please contact them at beer@kraemerandkin.com.

sarahashepic.JPG