 |
INTRODUCTION
From Water, CA, edited by Nicole Antebi
and Enid Baxter Blader. The book presents the most
contemporary intersections of art, community planning,
and environmental consciousness, with chapters by
renown artists, geographers and writers. Water, CA
is a fresh and innovative discussion of a challenging
and timely issue: Water in California.
The
Water, CA project grew out of our mutual connection
to the Salton Sea.
The largest lake in California, the Salton Sea is
bound by a sordid history of land developers gambling
on plots surrounding a flash-in-the-desert resort.
After two major floods, the landholders could trade
their chips only for the bleached bones of tilapia
that now cover the neglected sea’s shore. Popularly
referred to on the internet as the only "man
made mistake visible from space," the Salton
Sea has become a symbol for the misengineering of water,
on a galactic scale.
However, the residents of Niland, Salton City and
Bombay Beach refuse to give up on their marginal, "forgiving" communities. In
Chris Metzler and Jeff Springer’s documentary, Plagues
and Pleasures on the Salton Sea, local holdouts
traverse the Colorado Desert shores in golf carts,
sharing mid-morning cocktails and fond, hopeful memories
of the great parties of the past. They are articulate
about their shared history on the sea. They share a
mythology, as well: extolling the healing properties
of the salty, wine-colored water. Such awareness of
the water that connects them and holds them close is
unusual in our society. But then, this Sea calls to
mavericks.
The Sea also calls to artists. Its sublime, apparitional
presence in the middle of a desert at the foot of the
stark Chocolate mountains, just out of the way to nowhere,
anchoring hot dry borderlands, is the perfect end for
the San Andreas fault. Photographers, painters, and
writers describe the abandoned resort structures, outstanding
folk architecture, and the spectacular sense that here,
something reveals what is often hidden. History
shakes off the palimpsest of progress.
Although its re-creation may have been wildly accidental,
the survival of the Salton Sea is vital. Even as the
structures on its shores decay in a picturesque soup
of salt and rust, the sea serves as a last refuge to
many species of birds. It shakily stands in for wetlands
now covered with the asphalt of Los Angeles, Orange
and San Diego Counties.
Perhaps it is this state of watershed paradox—replicated
all over and over, infused with apocalyptic splendor,
fueled with myth, channeled in the violence of dams,
swamped under secret decay—that inspires so many
artistic investigations into California’s Water.
The projects featured in Water, CA delve
into buried histories, uncovering convergences and
unexpected connections. They revive dead languages,
speaking words in ways that signify forgotten meanings. They
meander down unexpected paths, reminding us of the
joy of discovery. They are gentle, yet forceful,
seizing the great opportunity for impossibility California’s
Water offers.
Best described by Marc Riesner in Cadillac Desert,
California’s water policies over the last 150
years directly manifest the mythology that made the
West. “Clouds follow Ploughs,” the
notion that tilled earth would create moisture, sent
American settlers West with magic in their minds. Unusually
wet weather patterns supported the theory that the
bustle of settlers, the noise of imperialism would
create moisture clouds, altering the climate. Dynamite
exploding in arid skies create clouds set the tone
the century. The superhuman irrigation
of a “semi-desert with a desert heart” (Riesner)
shaped the politics of the world.
As the landscape
was reengineered, so was language. One
can track the consciousness of water through the shifting
vocabulary of the 20th century. "Conservation" once
meant "exploiting every possible resource for
human use." "Waste" meant "letting
water reach the ocean unhindered." "Reclamation" meant
draining lakes, moving wetlands off the land.
Like the
riparian areas, the watershed citizen has become dislocated. Supporting
private concentrations of power and wealth through
land development, water, as a 19th century business
strategy, ended up state property. We have lost
connections to where our water comes from, where it
goes next, and what is sacrificed along the way. What
is at stake is the evaporating illusion of our civilization.
The
first section of Water, CA, Evaporating
Illusions offers us a chance to reconnect the
California water story. Reminding us the “We
are Mostly Water,” Eli Wadley and Brad Monsma
deliver their respective histories of water as internal
travelogue. Monsma focuses on the Sespe, Southern California’s
last wild river. Claude Willey advocates wildness,
and counsels dissolution of marriage for concrete and
water in the American West. Through portraits of monuments,
May Jong echoes the identification the bloody runoff
from these histories.
In Section Two: Private Revolutions, artists
stage private revolutions, establishing active personal
connections to the water, reclaiming language of the
landscape, practicing art as Stewardship. Joel Tauber
and Sant Khalsa document love affairs. Tauber’s
is with a lone tree in a sea of asphalt. Khalsa offers
us exquisite selections from her unremitting 30-year
commitment to the Santa Ana watershed. Artist and activist
Doug McCulloh takes us back to Mono Lake, connecting
his personal history, spanning from childhood vacations
through his time as a central figure in what became
on of California’s most important environmental
struggles, to the present, examining what it all meant. McCulloh
reminds us why we care, and what happens when we do.
Maps
create connections and define relationships. Water,
when mapped still fluctuates in level, width, direction
and meaning. In Section Three: Water Maps the
form of the map is explored and exploded. Christina
McPhee draws us a map in the wet sand with a toe. Isabelle
Duviver and Jane Wolff create watershed maps. Wolff’s
are also playing cards, alluding to the gamble of California’s
Water. Katie Vann explores game-like digital
tracking systems, creating real time water maps in
the desert heart of the San Joaquin Valley. Charles
Hood makes a map out of poems, playing with the language
of water and redefining landscape. Jane Tsong offers “Myriad
Unnamed Streams,” a map and self-guided tour
of Eagle Rock, CA. All these works we challenge
us make our own maps, redefining our relationships
with California’s landscape and communities.
Mapping
Water is one way to track the connections among seemingly
disparate communities and places. In
Section Four: Performing Water, artists take
direct action, challenging our notions of environmental
justice and artistic practice. July Cole and
Cleo Woelfe-Erskine of Greywater Guerillas present
two plays, while Jessica Hall, an advocate for resilient
urban waterways, creates a parade. Teens from Echo
Park Film Center get off the freeway and move slowly
through the urban landscape, creating a portrait of
the LA River on Super 8 film. Cynthia Hooper’s
portraits and Billboards delicately examine the intersections
of politics, formal sublime beauty and ecological devastation
at the border. More radically, Simparch introduces
us to Clean Livin’, through stunning
images and a self-reflexive conversation and about
their inhabitation of a former military superfund site
and its connection to healing the environment through
artistic practice.
These acts, sensitize us to our environments, remind
us of hidden histories and connect communities. In
age where ‘green’ has become another corporate
branding strategy, artists offer new strategies to affect
social change. The collected works of Water,
CA inspire us to break from isolation, reveal hidden
links, and amplify quiet voices - the stuff of revolution.
|