Drake Hotel Classic Wing

Liljana Mead Martin - Deep Thirst BioOrchestra

In Deep Thirst BioOrchestra, artist Liljana Mead Martin imagines a new botanical species, the first returners of a fire-scorched landscape. This niche ecosystem takes on hybrid characteristics of humans and plants, as ears and other appendages amalgamate with mycelium and carnivorous pitcher plant forms. They sprout and drip out of charred branches in fluorescent colours, mimicking the electric hues of thermal gradient maps, highlighting connections between temperature and inhabitability. Within this atmosphere, the BioOrchestra produces colour as though it were sound, suggesting excretions to attract life. As a result of their emergence from drought, their sensory based digestive systems are dehydrated and in a constant state of thirst. Conductor Cues a Blaze signals an attempt to connect with destroyed aspects of our environment. Cast in several mineral layers, a pair of hands frozen in gesture rests inside the concave hollow of a fire scorched log. This terrain of the BioOrchestra is a space where life comes forth despite the deathblows of storms, fires and droughts, but it is life altered. It’s existence relies on the ways in which it is non-human, the conductor’s gesture is low and still. Instead of making music, the BioOrchestra listens for it.

Artist Statement

Through a steadily expanding set of skills and processes I am interested in bringing awareness to the ground, the senses and material transformation. In the studio, I recycle organic, industrial and synthetic materials, beginning with what can be gleaned from my local environment. By creating sculptural casts of my own body, I mimic natural forms; hands become root systems, ears become mushroom clusters, feet become earth strata. These fusions between figuration, geology, plants and industry, allows me to reconnect with an intergenerational history of land cultivation and labour practices within my family. More broadly, this synthesis of materials and subjects acts to dissolve false dichotomies between humans and nature. Recently I have been applying embodied practices such as deep listening, choreographed movement and queer theory to generate new perspectives on toxicity and adaptation that defines our current moment.

About the Artist

Liljana Mead Martin is an artist based on Salt Spring Island, Tsawout First Nation and New York City, land of the Lenape People. Her artwork explores the material ecologies of deep time, land cultivation, and climate evolution primarily through sculpture and installation. She received an MFA from Emily Carr University (‘16) and completed her BFA at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (‘10). Her work has been shown in group exhibitions at the Nanaimo Art Gallery (Vancouver Island), CSA Space (Vancouver), ArtSpring (Salt Spring Island) and the Victoria Arts Council (Victoria). Her solo exhibition Geophilia, opened with Wil Aballe Art Projects (Vancouver) in 2021. She is the creator of BIOMASS, a platform for exhibitions and dialogues on artistic practice and energetic exchange.

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Interior Design: Company Company

Curated by Ashley Mulvihill 

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