Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Scott Listfield Humpback Art Print Release


PangeaSeed Foundation is pleased to announce the latest print release in our 2020 print project, "In Peril: A Visual Story of Our Ocean's Greatest Challenges". Featuring original artwork by supporting ARTivist Scott Listfield (USA). This limited art print edition highlights the devastating impacts of climate change on marine ecosystems and desertification.

Artist: Scott Listfield (USA)
Title: "Humpback"
Dimensions: 16x24 inches with the half-inch border
Edition size: Limited edition of 50 plus 5 APs signed/numbered by the artist
Pricing: $80 plus shipping

Available: Wednesday, March 11, 2020, at 12pm PST via shop.pangeaseed.org

Artist Statement:
"I made this painting last summer as part of a series of paintings for my first show in Australia, at Beinart Gallery in Melbourne. At the time I was thinking a lot about the fragile ecosystem of the Australian continent. It's a very dry country made up of a huge desert, surrounded by a ring of habitable land, which seems precarious giving rising global temperatures and increased desertification. Australia is also home to the Great Barrier Reef, one of the world's great natural wonders, which is in a perilous state. And, of course, Australia is where Mad Max comes from. Which might include some truly badass car chase scenes, but is also, at its heart, is a parable about our love for gas and automobiles trumping our love for nature and humanity. Well, at least as I see it.

And so I was thinking about all of these things as I worked on a series of paintings all set in a dusty desert plain, with remnants of our civilization mixed in with the last stragglers of a once vibrant ecology. The recent brush fires in Australia happened a few months after I finished this series of paintings, and made them seem oddly prescient. I make paintings about the future - the future we think we're going to have, to future we're trying to avoid, and the future perhaps we'd most like to see. I think we're living in a moment where the future is still very open, but we're increasingly inching towards the point where it will be dictated for us. What I really hope I'm doing in my work is pointing out how beautiful this future could be, but also how sad and empty it might turn out if we don't take some responsibility for it soon." - Scott Listfield

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