I am honored to be part of ReCollections at the Beaty Biodiversity Museum.

ReCollections
October 1, 2020 – February 20, 2022
Introduction
Museums are places of memory. In the Beaty Biodiversity Museum, every specimen in the hundred-year-old collection holds a history: of its own life, the people associated with it, and its evolutionary record stretching back through eons.
These memories are kept alive by the community around the museum: its researchers, faculty, staff, students, and volunteers.
This community’s commitment to biodiversity takes many forms, often in creative expression. Science and art were never mutually exclusive.
Showcasing these works celebrates the Beaty Biodiversity Museum’s first ten public years, and is a reminder that the museum is a place of recollection, of creativity, and of dreams.
Symbology
How is a painting of a flower different from a flower? In mediating the image of an organism, the artist creates a distance from the physical thing itself. This distance creates space for meaning to be read into the deliberate placement of every line. The combination of subjects holds value, as does the selection of media, colour, and scale. An image is a symbol, what does it mean to you?
Taxonomy
Drawing an organism to record what it is, and how it is different from similar forms is an ancient practice and one that is still used today. Drawing allows for characteristics to be isolated, emphasized, and compared clearly and simply. To name and describe species in accordance with international conventions is the science of taxonomy. What do you think is emphasized in these drawings that a photograph might not reveal?
Technology
Images surround us, and more often, these images are digital. An artwork may be created digitally and shared digitally, having no physical original. Digital art may also incorporate motion, sound, or interactivity. An artwork may be experienced simultaneously in multiple locations around the world. How is the art displayed here different than pieces on the wall?
Photography
To record patterns of light through mechanical means seems impartial, but a multitude of decisions go into the construction of a photographic image.
A photograph may be so specific that they can serve as a digital collection record of where and when an organism occurs. Or a photograph can be as abstract and evocative as any work of art. What does each photograph tell you?
Allegory
The natural world has been a source of inspiration for artists since the earliest works of art.
People will always read living forms into abstract shapes, and spin stories from a single image. Nature will always be the refuge, the adversary, the trickster, the mother, the self.
Humanity needs intact ecosystems for many reasons, and not least as a space for our collective imaginations to escape, to remember our role as one species among many on a planet filled with wonder. What inspires you?
Contributing artists, listed alphabetically by last name
Nicolas Bailly
Gabriela A. Barragan
Elisabeth Bergman
Jen Burgess
Ruby Burns
Sheila Byers
Amelia Choy
Brett Couch
Adrian Dwiputra
Thanushi Eagalle
Cassandra Elphinstone
Harold Eyster
Alyssa Gehman
Lauren Gill
Keely Hammond
Sylvia Heredia
Sydney Honsberger-Grant
Linda Horianopoulos
Erick James
Faith Jones
Patrick Keeling
Zaynah Khan
Lesha Koop
Chu Chien Lin
Margaret Lin
Amy Liu
Jennifer Losie
Colin MacLeod
Wayne Maddison
Beatriz Martin
Sam Matys
Quinn McCallum
Ailsa McFadyen-Mungall
Anita Miettunen
Jenny Munoz
Virginia Noble
Mary O’Connor
Zoe Panchen
Michelle Pang
Philippe Roberge
Catherine Salinas
Keerthikrutha Seetharaman
Amanda Smith
Catherine Stewart
Ildiko Szabo
Derek Tan
Wouter van der Bijl
Simi Wei
Hanson Wong
Cathy Yan
Isaac Yuen
Exhibition Contributors:
Curator
Yukiko Stranger-Galey and Derek Tan
Designer
Derek Tan, Evan Craig, and Simi Wei
Fabricator
Lesha Koop
Education Advisor
Nancy Lee
Judging Committee
Sylvia Heredia, Wayne Maddison, Karen Needham, Gregory Shapiro, Eric Taylor, and Karen Yurkovich