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My practice encompasses a variety of experimental processes that animate both natural and constructed environments, seeking to form connections between culture, nature and place. I am concerned with how physical, tactile interactions in nature can shape our inner experiences and understanding of the world. I currently live and work in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada.
Showing posts with label Troy Nickle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Troy Nickle. Show all posts

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Snow Drawing on Cottonwood at the Helen Schuler Nature Centre




I went down to the Helen Schuler Nature Centre in Lethbridge Alberta and found this dead cottonwood that would work well for an intervention. It was minus 12 degrees celsius. Snow began falling as I packed snow onto the surface of the tree. The snow was reluctant to stick but with some time I was able to get it to stay. The drawing process was an organic response to the limitations of the snow adhering to the tree and to line, form, context and space. The drawing evolved from simple lines and modular shapes that I refined with a stick to eventually become a connected form.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

A Walk in Pavan Park on Remembrance Day









Walking in Pavan Park on Remembrance day. Hundreds of Canada Geese rest along the shore in the open water of the nearby Oldman river. The sound of honking geese echoes throughout the river valley. I find a small nest and place yellow berries and rose hips in the nest. I walk to the end of a path and place it on a log. On my way back I am curious to see if snow will stick to a cottonwood without bark. It does, so I create this intervention.


Tuesday, September 30, 2014

An essay written by Nicole Ensing on my exhibition, Process, Place and Perception at the Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art in Kelowna B.C


Too often we define nature as a separate entity from humans, ignoring that we are a part of the natural world. In Process, Place, Perception, Troy Nickle’s thoughtful installations bring a fresh nuance to our understanding of natural processes and what we interpret as art.  Nickle challenges our connection with nature and culture, bridging the gaps in our relationships with the natural world. 

Nickle’s body of work has an understanding of the ecosystem from which it was formed; he acknowledges environmental impact and future implications through his choice of materials. The many materials used in his pieces are not chosen on a whim, but are part of his artistic process. Nickle encounters the materials, like the plant species goldenrod, yarrow, or wild rose (some of the many species used in his installation) on walks and hikes while exploring Lethbridge or other parts of southern Alberta. He makes his selection, but waits until the individual plant has set its seed and dried and only then does he take a portion for his work.

Some of these plants are found in After the First Snow Fall, in which Nickle has situated twenty-six pieces (12 distinctive species) of dried plants such that they extrude from the wall as if reaching out to the viewer. Numerous shadows feather out from the lifeless plants in a spirited fashion, mimicking the life that once existed. This piece disrupts the usual interactions we have with plants, often looked down upon by us, but now facing us at eye level, inviting us in. By challenging our normal perception of the natural world, Nickle has highlighted our general disregard for those small plants and the value they hold.

Similarly, Goldenrod Doodle, reaches out from the wall, although the twisted goldenrod has taken on a new form. Due to a fly larva, an engorged gull is now a part of each plant, the plants are twisted and gnarly as if ignoring the shape and order imposed upon it on the wall. Nickle’s arrangement of the materials provides the viewer with a new way of seeing. By elevating and creating structure with the natural materials within the gallery, it challenges the viewer to change their perception of what art can be.

His piece, Endless, stands in the corner of the gallery as if a somber reminder of the past and of things to come. Endless pays homage to The Endless Column by Constantin Brâncuși, symbolizing "Infinite Sacrifice.” Reflecting Brâncuși in form, Endless is a tower of rhomboidal shapes, constructed with drift wood pieces. Nickle’s sculpture brings a material like wood to the forefront, a material that can break down, illuminating the ceaseless ephemeral processes of nature. The structure itself is reflective, possibly symbolizing a stupa (Buddhist shrine), or simply bestowing the gallery with a drift wood cairn. It is this uncertainty that context can impose, thus the viewer is encouraged to take from their own experience, and to think carefully about what the shape, structure, and materials mean to them.

In Process, Place, Perception, Troy Nickle’s installations echo a spiritual sense of understanding; each piece is contemplative and meditative, and open to interpretation. Nickle has put our interactions with nature at the fore, questioning our understanding of life, and our role within it. Nickle provides us with opportunity to look upon nature in an altered context, re-envisioning our relationship to the natural world.

Essay by Nicole Ensing







                            

                            

















All images and artwork by Troy Nickle



This work titled, "All Time is Now," was part of the public space component of my exhibition with the Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art. The work was situated at the Woodhaven Nature Conservancy Regional Park in Kelowna, B.C.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Crowsnest River Stone Circle




May 18. Working along the Crowsnest river near Lundbreck Falls, Alberta. The river runs high due to mountain run off. I see an opportunity to create an intervention on an outcrop of deposited sediment where there are a variety of coloured stones to choose from. I begin by collecting hazel coloured stones and assemble them into a square. I collect sand coloured stones next and assemble them into a circle and around the hazel coloured stones. I follow that by placing light coloured blues stones on the outside of the circle. The constant sound of the river is calming, there is no wind and the sun is warm. A large group of Kayakers paddle by while I am working. I hear a bird with a beautiful song and a bird that lives along the river flies back and forth just above the waters surface while chirping.

Friday, January 17, 2014

Around the Center


















During my residency organized by the Colorado Art Ranch, in collaboration with the Aldo Leopold Research Institute I created an intervention titled, “ Around the Center,” which was made in the Superior National Forest on a large stone along a path between the Ranger Station and the Vermillion College in Ely, Minnesota.

I started to contemplate the symbolic nature of this work and could relate it to when a stone is thrown in the water and ripples expand outward around the stone’s impact in the water. The stone’s impact creates energy and this energy radiates outward. This to me this also represented the energy created by the artists and scientists when they were able to learn about each other’s disciplines, collaborate and share common interests in nature.

From the creation of this work I began to consider what is at the center of my experiences in this unique place, and what surrounds this center? It is really absurd to try to define this center as a fixed thing because reality is continually changing from moment to moment. All phenomena are impermanent and therefore subject to change. What once was at the center of my experience has since dissolved with each new moment and as I have begun to intellectualize it, it is no longer what it was. Things begin to disintegrate and suddenly we realize that they do not exist in a fixed manner or exist independently but rather they exist in relation to, and in dependence on everything and are therefore interconnected. At the time that I am writing this, the ephemeral artwork that I have created has since devolved back into the environment and is no longer recognizable as an artwork.

The materials that I have used to create this work came from the needles of a White Pine and mosses that were collected from the shady forest floor. These materials could not exist without the elements of nature in balance creating the right conditions for the vegetation to grow. Without the glaciers that deposited this rock some 10,000 to 12,000 years ago I would not have a site to create this work. The White Pine grows in this area because of the well-drained soil and cool, humid climate of northern Minnesota. These beautiful trees provide food and shelter for numerous animals including, forest birds, squirrels, lynx, and wolves. It also provides cool damp shaded areas for a variety of vegetation like mosses and mushrooms to grow. Many people are drawn to this area to experience this unique beauty. Out canoeing on the water or sitting by the lake there is no need to worry about deadlines or being late for a meeting.  Somehow living in the moment and the simple experience of traveling on water by canoe, setting up camp, cooking dinner by fire and enjoying the sights and sounds of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness feels liberating. When we can stop, breathe, and listen to what is around us, we are more open and receptive to the world around us.

While I was in Ely, I learned that an issue central to many people in the area revolved around the developments of a new mine. The town seemed to be polarized between those that supported the mine for their livelihood and those that were worried that the mine would affect the environment by bringing changes to the area that were damaging and irreversible. Many people depend on the area for a variety of things in order to sustain a livelihood. The mining companies depend on the valuable minerals in the bedrock while people who are supported by tourism depend on the landscape and wildlife for recreation activities such as canoeing, backpacking, dogsledding, fishing and hunting.  I began to think since everyone depends on the land and it’s central to the health and livelihood of everyone, isn’t preserving the landscape in everybody’s best interests both sustainably and economically? As Chief Seattle said, “Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect.” The development of the mine would permanently alter the landscape; affect water and air quality and take hundreds of years to fully recover. Does this outweigh the benefits that the mine will bring to the community? Are there other ways of creating jobs that won’t negatively affect the environment? And what are the prevailing attitudes that justify the development of a mine in this area? Aldo Leopold writes, “We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.”

As a stone strikes the water and creates energy, this unique residency allowed for artists and scientists to bridge creativity with observation and research.  While residing in Ely, Minnesota during our residency we learned of the complex issues regarding this unique community and have grown from our shared experiences. From our varied perspectives we are creating new energy to move forward to inspire others to be concerned about the future of our planet, to become aware of our environment and to bridge gaps between the divisions that separate us.



Photograph by Lawson Gerdes
A photo of artists Anaya Cullen (left), Troy Nickle (center) and Katherine Ball (right), at Sigurd Olsen's cabin near Ely, Minnesota.
This post is also shown on the Aldo & Leonardo blog found here: http://aldoandleonardo.blogspot.ca

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Windows Through Time - A collaboration between Troy Nickle, Mark Jirsa, the Minnesota Geological Survey and the University of Minnesota


Is time merely a limited linear concept created by mankind so that we can understand the passing of the days, weeks and years?  We seldom think of time on a vast scale encompassing thousands, millions and even billions of years. I wonder what the earth looked like a billion years ago. How has our earth formed and evolved over that period of what we call time? It’s hard to fathom, but I had the opportunity to take a 6 day trip with geologist Mark Jirsa into the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, (BWCAW), to gain an understanding of Minnesota’s ancient bedrock crust and had a glimpse of what the earth might have looked like millions of years ago.

Mark focuses on precambrian geology, studying and mapping many of the rock outcrops in the BWCAW and throughout Minnesota to improve our understanding of crustal evolution that spans nearly 3 billion years. Many of the exposures in the Boundary Waters area provide examples of some of Earth’s oldest and most complex crust – the core of the North American Continent. Much of the bedrock in Minnesota is covered by hundreds of feet of glacial sediment.  The bedrock in Superior National Forest which includes the BWCAW is near or at land surface, creating exposures that are sufficiently large and closely spaced allowing it to be mapped in detail.


Mark tells me that he is trying to uncover the geological story behind the formations in the rock. The once flat-lying strata has been folded, metamorphosed (thermally altered), faulted and now stand nearly on end. Like a detective Mark looks at the rock and tries to uncover the story behind it. He looks at the layers measuring the direction with a compass, determining the strike or trend of the layer and if possible the angle the layers recede into the rock, (the dip) and tries to determine which way is up, (the topping) formed by an understanding of the sediments in the layers, and how sediments settle- usually the heavier sediments settle first then the lighter ones later. He takes a UTM (Universe Transverse Mercator) reading of the location and writes a variety of geologist nomenclature on the sediments that formed the rock, the type of rock, fault lines and other information that will help him form detailed maps of the geology. Mark is seriously passionate about his work and it is not hard if you’re near him to soon be consumed with trying to understand and uncover the geological story at how this ancient bedrock might have formed.


It took us 2 days to paddle out to our base camp in the south arm of Knife Lake. There Mark and I developed a collaboration that would bridge geology with art. Mark was really amazing to work with and helped form some of the ideas driving the work.  Through a discussion of where this work could go and how to relate art with geology we decided to frame key areas of rock formations, sediment layers, fault lines and other interesting areas of bedrock as windows looking back into the ancient past. I used locally available materials like stone, wood or reeds to create the frames placed over areas of bedrock and created a frame that was 1 meter square and corresponded to a UTM location.  Mark took notes of the location, the strike, dip, topping, type and age of rock, sediment formations and numerous other details which will be part of the work while I created the frame and took a detailed image of the rock within the frame and an image of where the work exists in context to the land. Each rock formation is like a unique drawing that forms interesting lines and textures telling a story of an ancient world. During one day of mapping we documented 10 sites while hiking through the Knife Lake burn of 2011. We walked through thick brush, fallen trees and endured the high winds, heavy rain and  later were rewarded with a spectacular view.We covered a large area and when we got back to camp made plans to cover other areas on our route back.





Over time there has been drastic change to the landscape which I learned are traceable through the stone. From continental seas that once covered North America, sediment laden rivers, volcanism, to multiple episodes of tectonic plate collision. It makes me wonder about how we perceive time. Many of these stones seem immovable but were once liquid lava entering an ocean, or sand, mud and silt carried in turbidity currents to eventually settle on an ocean or river floor, overtime forming into solid bedrock then later to be thrust to the surface by a tectonic plate collision.


Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Paddling for Invasive Weeds in the Boundary Waters


After 17 hours of driving from Canada I finally arrived in Ely, (pronounced Elee) Minnesota, a town filled with canoe enthusiasts, canoe outfitters, outdoor enthusiasts, fishermen and hunters all taking advantage of the nearby Superior National Forest and the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. My first impression of this little town reminded me of mountain towns in Alberta and British Columbia, Canada, although instead of seeing mountain bikes on the car roof rack you would usually see canoes.  Our journey into the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness would involve a 4 day trip with fellow artist Anaya Cullen, Forest Service ecologist Jack Greenlee and biological technician and wilderness ranger Becca Orf. Jack and Becca are working in the Boundary Waters to monitor and mitigate invasive plants. The work that they undertake involves paddling out to the many camp sites along the network of lakes within the Boundary Waters to check the progress of invasive plants, map the locations with GPS and pull the plants. The plants that they target are not native to the area, and were usually introduced during European settlement. Many of these plants overtake an area and are hard to remove due to large interconnecting root systems. Plants like Canada thistle can shade out native plants and knapweed releases a toxin in their roots that affects most native plants, hence the name invasive. Some of these plants include Canada Thistle, Common Tansy, Hawkweed, Knapweed, Ox Eye Daisy, Leafy Spurge and Purple Loosestrife to name a few.



On this trip we were looking at an area that had burned in the Pagami Fire. The area had a unique beauty to it as the bright red and orange bind weed that covered the forest floor was creeping up the black charred pines. Many of the new growth included a large number of Jack Pine whose seeds stay dormant until the heat of a fire burst the seeds open. Jack took notes of the new vegetation occupying the burned area.





On our trip we would travel through more than 5 lakes and portage canoe and gear more than 8 times, some portages as long as half a kilometer. We camped and paddled in pouring rain and while trying to wait the rain out sat under a tarp, shared chocolate and  played cribbage on a homemade crib board with Forest Rangers Chris and Terry who were working at our site. It turned out to be a great rain day!



Paddling through the area was a delight; some of the exposed rock in the Boundary Waters, part of the Canadian Shield, is some of the oldest rock on the planet. We often saw common loons, ducks, Canada geese, bald eagles, squirrels, and a variety of interesting mushrooms and vegetation.






The work that Jack and Becka do made me consider what is the relation of my art to the environment, and how can I utilize invasive plants in my work to build on an awareness of these plants and perhaps even mitigate these populations. Part of mitigating invasive weeds involves pulling them so I intend to immerse myself in areas with invasive plants to collect them for my work. I am interested in my art playing a role in mitigating invasive plants and the aesthetics of creating something visually interesting from them.