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2col Dan Gottsegen,

“I Can Not Stop the Romance,” 2006.

FOR 5-25

‘THOREAU RECONSIDERED’ OPENS JUNE 7 AT WAVE HILL w/1 cut

avv/gs set 5-15 #699833

BRONX, N.Y. — “Thoreau Reconsidered” is the second in Wave Hill’s trio of exhibitions, curated by Jennifer McGregor, that explore Nineteenth Century American writing about nature through the lens of contemporary art. The exhibit will be on view June 7–August 26. A reception will be Sunday, June 10, from 1 to 4 pm.

Vermont artist Dan Gottsegen presents new paintings based on Thoreau’s essay, “Walking,” which celebrates the writer’s daily strolls, a practice that informs Gottsegen’s own regimen.

Richard Bosman’s painting of Thoreau’s cabin is part of the painter’s series on the workplaces of Nineteenth Century writers. Kansas City artist Anne Lindberg’s plumbago drawings recall the Thoreau family’s enterprise, which manufactured wooden pencils.

Recognizing Thoreau’s distain for ornament, Ellen Harvey’s installation of mirrored surfaces turns the outdoors in, each surface hand engraved with drawings of the view from the sun porch windows.

Thoreau’s observations about light and about his life at Walden Pond have inspired three projects in the exhibition. Spencer Finch’s installation captures the wind at Walden, while Stefan Hagen exhibits “The Last Day at Walden,” a series of long-exposure images from 16 walks around Walden Pond.

In the Abrons Woodland, Philadelphia artist Richard Torchia’s cabin structure with a camera obscura device projects images of Wave Hill’s woodlands on the interior walls.

Ellen Driscoll addresses issues of interdependence and resistance, inspired by Thoreau’s essay on “Civil Disobedience.” Her room-sized landscape of puppetlike figures is made exclusively from recyclable plastic, harvested from water, milk and cider jugs. Mary Temple exhibits a video and collaborates with John Rappleye on a window installation that draws on “Civil Disobedience.”

Wave Hill is at West 249th Street and Independence Avenue. For information, www.wavehill.org or 718-549-3200.

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