Beatrice Modisett and Kerri Ammirata | P.A.D.

Beatrice Modisett, The Skin of Our Terrain IV, 2023 Instax Wide in charred artist-built frame with a found and charred piece of downed tree from Summit, NY on aluminum Variable dimensions

More Trees Than People!! 
Beatrice Modisett and Kerri Ammirata
P.A.D.
October 28, 9am-7pm 2023

Introduction

Under the trees, ten fingernails dug and scraped at the dirt, moving just enough material to create an indent the size of two hands cupped together. A wax cast was made and the dirt was returned. Up the hill in a grassy clearing, four hands collected hundreds of fallen acorns one by one, while many more continued to fall around them. These acorns and the great potential they hold collided with the spruce wood of a 100 year old violin and a sonic celebration filled our ears. The acorns were returned. In a meadow surrounded by mountains, two hands wrapped grass around a twig and paper structure, two hands rested in a lap, one hand held a paintbrush, the breeze halted and then returned. 

A campfire was always burning.

In August of 2023, artists Kerri Ammirata and Beatrice Modisett invited five city-based visual artists and musicians to spend three days sleeping, cooking, showering, resting and otherwise living outside together in the woods of Summit, NY, a small mountain top community located between the Catskill and Adirondack mountains of Upstate New York. Artists were invited to create site responsive work for an upcoming exhibition with P.A.D. (Project Art Distribution), a nomadic, outdoor exhibition space in SoHo, NYC.  With our physical conditions upended cognitive shifts soon followed. The work created during these three days presented seven different takes on a single place most of the artists had never been to, yet formed a deep relationship with. The idiosyncrasies of each work, and each artist’s approach, highlighted the generosity of non-humancentric landscapes as places that make space for novel ideas and ways of creation.

Once back in our familiar working conditions, we metabolized our profound experience with this place and with each other into the objects presented in the outdoor group exhibition, More Trees Than People!!.  When transported to P.A.D. these images and objects created a space to consider the poetics of the woods and the politics of SoHo, and served as portals to a place where there are many more trees than people.

The seven participating artists and musicians were Natessa Amin, Kerri Ammirata, Beatrice Modisett, Charlotte Munn-Wood, Aimée Niemann, s.arinade, and Christine Stiver

More Trees Than People!! Statement

Co-organized by Kerri Ammirata and Beatrice Modisett, the residency More Trees Than People!! took place on 26 acres of woods and meadow in Summit, NY. Surrounded by farmland and lakes the property presents myriad opportunities for both solitude and intentional community building. As the current caretakers, artist Beatrice Modisett and percussionist Ellery Trafford are hand-building environmentally friendly dwellings for artists, musicians, and writers to enjoy this space with minimal impact. Despite human presence, the property continues to be a haven for wildlife. Every decision made on the property centers on reciprocity, gratitude, equity, and sustainability and we welcome artists and makers with similar ethics to the property.

Kerri Ammirata utilizes painting to explore themes of sacred geometry, astronomy, and landscape. Through idiosyncratic and invented techniques that are both aggressive and meditative her paintings dissolve boundaries and disintegrate shapes into hypnotic, rhythmic marks.

Beatrice Modisett is a visual artist working primarily with found and handmade materials with a focus on the creation of meaning through process, material, and image. Through the lens of her deep connection with non-humancentric landscapes, Modisett’s images and objects explore themes of memory, loss, return, hope, creation, and destruction.

Ellery Trafford is a percussionist and founding member of TAK Ensemble, a new music ensemble dedicated to presenting experimental music by living composers and founded on the principles of curiosity, change, and caring communication.

P.A.D. Statement 

P.A.D. is a nomadic outdoor art exhibition space in the historic SoHo (South of Houston) Arts District in New York City. It reflects the bustling economy of artists making, selling, and promoting their artworks on the street year-round, weather permitting. The space aims to platform small and editioned works by artists who are interested in embracing new contexts for exhibiting.

 

Approach/methodology 

While some impacts were calculable we also chose to focus on the intangible and incalculable/infinite impacts the project had on participants. The spaces that upheld this project, both the property in Summit, NY and P.A.D were founded on principles that center on environmentally friendly practices. For the purpose of this Climate Impact Report, we researched nine areas that we identified as having the most impact on both the participants and the environment: Travel, Ceremony, Dwelling, Fire, Meals, Energy, Light, Water, and Waste.

Putting this report together highlighted areas where calculable emissions could be further tempered in future iterations and also areas where incalculable positive impact could be heightened. This includes the creation of more opportunities to discuss the environmentally aware decisions that are being made at every step of the project and including participants in these conversations which were centered by the organizers.  We have included these nine areas of research below in descending order of most impact to least. This report will further outline the impacts in each of these areas.

 
 

Meals : 186.g C02e | Space for collaboration and conversation

The three vegan meals a day which we shared communally nourished our bodies and acted as fertile space to discuss the ideas we had for our practices, the poems we began the meals with, and our individual insights into the place we were discovering together.

The exhibition at P.A.D.

REFLECTIONS

In the process of putting this report together, I realized how seemingly impossible it felt to quantify the true extent and impact of this project. Yes, I was able to determine how much electricity I used based on how many hours I spent on my laptop compiling this report, but what about the environmental impact of the materials used to make the wires that bring that electricity to my home? Or the impact of the trucks that carried the wires here? The factories that made them? While there is surely a mind in the world that can quantify the many tributaries of the impact that using a laptop can cause, it is not mine. So I focused on what this artist's mind can highlight and define as impactful.

Aside from the calculable - the tC02e, the wattage, the gallons - I found the most intangible and incalculable spaces created by this project to have the greatest impact on the environment and participants of this project. It is in these incalculable spaces where artists and musicians thrive, where conversations and imaginations lead to ideas for potential futures, actions, and ideas. These undefinable spaces are where new tributaries are formed, and these tributaries, when flowing with words and thoughts about our environment and our place in it, become more impactful than the 0.48tons of tC02 our cars released transporting us on the way to have these conversations. For this project, these spaces existed during our meals, our ceremonies, and our campfires. 

I continue to have conversations with many participants of this project about how their relationship with their environment has changed because of their three immersive days in the woods. I am reminded of this quote from Wendell Berry “People exploit what they have merely concluded to be of value, but they defend what they love, and to defend what we love we need a particularizing language, for we love what we particularly know.” Three days fully immersed in the outdoors allowed seven artists and musicians from a large city to begin developing their particular languages; these beginnings of new language manifested in the group exhibition at P.A.D. and continued in conversation and this report. 

A future iteration of this project is already planned for July 2024. Based on what I learned in this report, this future iteration will make moves to reduce calculable impacts. We hope to source all meal ingredients from local farmers in Schoharie Valley and avoid all big box grocery stores, we plan to cut down on travel emissions by encouraging train travel from NYC rather than driving multiple cars to the residency site and we hope to upgrade our solar power systems so that work done in preparation for the residency and putting together the next Climate Impact Report can all be done with solar rather than grid energy.

Conversations around the campfire, during meals and ceremonies will continue to be a major focus of this upcoming project.

Credits and Links

This report was created by the artist Beatrice Modisett, using a template from Artists Commit. Artists Commit CIR Mentor, Deville Cohen offered guidance, structure, and editing support.

Exhibition Link:
P.A.D Exhibition Images
Residency Images

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