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POSTPONED--AC Panel Discussion: Institutional Responsibility + Carbon Neutrality

  • Amplify Arts 1419 South 13th Street Omaha, NE, 68108 United States (map)

We understand that health and safety are at the top of everyone’s minds right now. Our staff is monitoring information from the CDC, Nebraska Medicine, and the Douglas County Health Department. In the interest of keeping our communities healthy and safe by limiting exposure to and transmission of Covid-19, this Alternate Currents Panel Discussion has been postponed. We believe the conversation about what institutions can do to mitigate their carbon footprints is an important one and we look forward to having this discussion soon. Stay tuned for more details and a new date / time / format!

Over 1300 local governments in 25 countries, including Argentina, Canada, Great Britain, and France have declared a climate emergency. International arts organizations, environmental organizations, and educational institutions are increasingly willing to address divestment from fossil fuels and the moral implications of climate change while strengthening climate education and engagement initiatives. Given the climate movement’s growing momentum, what does moving the institutional goalpost toward carbon neutrality look like here in Omaha?

Amplify’s next AC lunch-time conversation on Friday, March 20th from 12-1pm brings together Rachel Adams, Chief Curator and Director of Programs at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts; Carol RedWing Membership Coordinator at Filmstreams and Instructor in the Native American Studies Program at the University of Nebraska at Omaha; and Merica Whitehall, Executive Director of Fontenelle Forest for a candid discussion that takes a closer look at how institutional values, operations, and funding are shaped by a changing climate. Bring lunch, come with questions, and join the conversation.

Please RSVP here.

Alternate Currents opens space for conversation, ideation, and action around national and international discussions in the arts that have a profound impact at the local level. Alternate Currents exists both on- and off-line in the form of a dedicated online resource and lunch-time conversation series.

You can read up on the panel topic with the online resources found on the Alternate Currents blog page: www.amplifyarts.org/alternate-currents

Free and open to the public. This program is presented with the support of the Nebraska Arts Council and the Nebraska Cultural Endowment.

About the Panelists:

Rachel Adams: Rachel Adams is the Chief Curator and Director of Programs at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts. From 2015 until October 2018, she was the Senior Curator of Exhibitions for the UB Art Galleries in Buffalo, NY. Adams holds an MA in Exhibition and Museum Studies from the San Francisco Art Institute and a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her areas of research are varied but include a focus on the crossover between contemporary art and architecture, performance and video and new media practices. Recent exhibitions include Alison O’Daniel: Heavy Air, Jillian Mayer: Timeshare, and she co-curated Introducing Tony Conrad: A Retrospective, the first exhibition of Tony Conrad’s work after the artist’s death. Her 2017 exhibition Wanderlust: Actions, Traces, Journeys 1967-2017—a 50-year survey of artists performing in the landscape—was awarded grants from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts with a catalogue by MIT Press. Forthcoming curatorial projects include solo exhibitions with Paul Mpagi Sepuya, Claudia Wieser, Maya Dunietz and All Together, Amongst Many: Reflections on Empathy, a group exhibition in response to the upcoming 2020 elections in the United States. 

Carol RedWing: Carol RedWing is an enrolled member of the Yankton Dakota Tribe with Santee Dakota descendancy. She runs the Membership department at Film Streams, a local nonprofit that promotes the discussion and presentation of film as an art form. Carol also teaches Native American Studies courses at the University of Nebraska at Omaha; her coursework emphasizes the relationship between Indigenous cultural survivance and empowerment through community engagement. In 2017, Carol received her Master of Public Administration degree, with a Nonprofit Management concentration from UNO. During her undergraduate career, Carol primarily studied Environmental Science, Indigenous Studies, Music, and Language. Along with being a board member of Mode Shift Omaha, Carol is also on the Chancellor’s Native American Advisory Cabinet at UNO. When it comes to art, her favorite mediums to work with are acrylic paints and beads, albeit not simultaneously.

Mercia Whitehall: Merica Whitehall is Executive Director of Fontenelle Forest, a nonprofit nature center and 2,100 acre forested greenspace bordering the Missouri River and located in the Omaha metro area. Fontenelle Forest’s conservation efforts include statewide rescue and rehabilitation of migratory birds of prey; land protection and ecological restoration; and, environmental education and nature-based programming for all-ages that focuses on inspiring current and future generations to care for the natural world. Prior to leading Fontenelle Forest, Merica served as Executive Director of the Nature Consortium in Seattle, WA. There she produced employed environmental artists as educators and facilitators of nature-based learning and reflection. She also produced the Arts in Nature Festival, a two-day multidisciplinary art festival at a 40-acre urban forest in West Seattle. In 2016, with Merica at its helm, Fontenelle Forest launched the Helen and Hollis Baright Gallery Artist Series. Each year, Fontenelle Forest exhibits artist’s works that reflect a diversity of mediums and cultural perspectives on nature, the environment, and the land that has become the property of Fontenelle Forest.

Merica has over 20 years of nonprofit leadership experience including nine years as a nationally touring artist and arts manager. As a dancer and musician, Merica performed at theatres and festivals including the Houston International Festival, Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors, Memphis in May, and the Spoleto Festival USA to name a few. Merica earned an Executive Master’s Degree in Nonprofit Leadership from Seattle University. Upon completion of her degree, she taught as a faculty member for Seattle University’s Institute for Public Service. Merica has also worked as an independent consultant and trainer for ArtsWA, STG’s Paramount Theater, Seattle Center Festal Cultural Festival Series, the Intiman Theatre, and Seattle Children’s Theatre, and SEEDArts among others. Merica currently serves on the board of directors for the Nebraska Land Trust, Back to the River, and Opera Omaha.