Charlotte Street Foundation's Urban Culture Project presents Humanature, an exhibition featuring installations, sculptures, photographs, prints, and mixed media works that investigate relationships among humans and nature.
Raising questions about the definitions of "natural" and "man made," the boundaries implied therein, and the manners in which humans are disposed to representing "nature" as "other," this exhibition argues for a more expansive consideration. "Our influence over the natural world, and the impact this influence in turn exerts upon human civilization, make readily apparent the fact that we are, in fact, part of an ongoing natural process in which both choice and chance determine the outcome," writes curator B.j. Vogt. "It is relevant therefore to propose that humans exist as a natural event unfolding within the evolutionary timeline of the Earth." Installed in a manner that invokes aspects of a natural history museum, the exhibition will feature several large-scale, dynamic installations including a giant volcano spewing Styrofoam "popcorn" by artist/curator B.j Vogt titled We Are Better Volcanoes than Volcanoes. St. Louis- based artist Cameron Fuller presents several works, including a display of many dozens of photographs of natural disasters, a museum-like diorama featuring a taxidermied coyote, and Remembering Washington, an ambitious installation comprised of a hand-made Kwaikutl-style costume and giant mask rendered as a wall-drawing, with a performative video playing in its mouth.Charlotte Street Foundation is dedicated to making Kansas City a place where artists and art thrive. Through its Urban Culture Project initiative, Charlotte Street supports artists of all disciplines and contributes to city's vitality by transforming previously vacant spaces into dynamic venues for multi-disciplinary contemporary arts programming. For more information, visit www.charlottestreet.org.
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