Benefit | FAR x WIDE
FAR x WIDE, Project for Ukraine, Subduction No. 5, map weaving, March 15, 2022, https://farbywide.com
FAR x WIDE | Project for Ukraine
March 15, 2022
I have donated one of my map weavings for FAR x WIDE: Project for Ukraine. Over 65 artists have donated their art to help raise funds for the people of Ukraine. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of the artwork will go to Razom’s Emergency Fund for Ukraine.
For more information visit: www.farbywide.com
With artwork by: Aaron Wexler, Adriana Farmiga, Alex Diamond, Alison Kudlow, Allison Honeycutt, Amy Sacksteder, Ariel Shea, Beatrice Wolert, Becky Brown, Beka Goedde, Brett Day Windham, Crystalle Lacouture, Elisa Soliven, Emily Noelle Lambert, Emily Weiner, Georgia Elrod, Gretchen Scherer, Hilary Doyle, Holden O'Brien, Jamie Romanet, Jane Kang Lawrence, Jason Rohlf, Jean Nagai, Jenna Ransom, Jenny Kemp, Jess Willa Wheaton, Jessica Simorte, Joey Weiss, Jordan Buschur, Julia Westerbeke, Justin Richel, Karen Dana Cohen, Karen Lederer, Katie Merz, Katy Krantz, Kerri Ammirata, Ky Anderson, Lauren Dana Smith, Lauren Portada, Liz Ainslie, Leonora Loeb, Malik John-Marc Purvis, Matthew F Fisher, Matthew López-Jensen, Max Manning, Meredith Iszlai, Michael Gac Levin, Mira Schor, Monica Carrier, Naomi Kawanishi Reis, Nina Kintsurashvili, Rachel Klinghoffer, Rachel Ostrow, Rob Matthews, Rob Nadeau, Sarah Morejohn, Shannon Rae Fincke, Shannon Rankin, Sharon Servilio, Shoshannah White, Stephanie Sherwood, Stuart Diamond, Sunny Chapman, Susan Carr, Taylor Loftin, Theresa Hackett, Thomas Spoerndle, Will Hutnick, Zach Seeger
Image: Subduction No. 5, 2021, Ink on hand-woven geologic maps, 9 x 6 inches
PRIVATE COLLECTION
ABOUT: Far x Wide is an artist-run project that organizes thematic group exhibitions and art benefits presented online and in available spaces. Far x Wide seeks to explore a range of ideas by bringing artists together and providing an opportunity for the public to support their work while also supporting social and environmental justice organizations. Far x Wide is based in Brooklyn, NY and was founded by Jessica Cannon in October 2017.
Feature | 12 NM Artists to Know
Press | Featured in Southwest Contemporary Magazine as 12 New Mexico Artists to Know Now, 2021
Southwest Contemporary | The New Mexico Field Guide, 2021
Shannon Christine Rankin: 12 New Mexico Artists to Know Now
MAY 25, 2021
Artist Shannon Christine Rankin works with maps to depict new, reimagined, and ever-changing geographies.
Roswell, NM | shannonchristinerankin.com | @shannonchristinerankin
The Earth often feels entirely quantified; as if everything is laid out neatly and named. But of course, maps are surprisingly inaccurate. The relative size of things, even the fact that most of South America is east of Florida, are often eschewed in our own mental maps. And then, of course, there are the borders that shift, the rivers and glaciers slowly moving, and in our own neighborhoods, the “desire trails” created across a patch of grass trod by too many pedestrians, the nameless but familiar alleys that never shore up in any atlas.
Shannon Christine Rankin works with maps and their vernacular to orient us anew to the world and its most enduring quality: change. In series like Earth Embroideries, she transcribes melting ice sheets in Antarctica via satellite imaging into minimal depictions with thread on paper, literally confronting our attempt to hold on to (and hold in our hands) what we can, even as the environment around us shifts, both challenging and sentimentalizing the act of map-making.
With change inevitably comes fragility. Nothing lasts, old things fade away. Rubbings created from uneven topographies in charcoal create gulfs on paper; nautical charts lose their bearings in collages created as laments for polar ice sheets. By splicing, scaling up and down, and reimagining the structure we put to place, we are called to look closer and closer. To ask: what is that most familiar terrain beneath your feet and in your mind? The sandstone and shale on this swath of land are here because this was once a shallow sea, but there’s a new geography now. Throughout Rankin’s work, these new geographies are multiplied, layered, and complicated by perception, experience, and the sense of aliveness inherent in change. — Maggie Grimason
Maggie Grimason is a writer and editor living in Albuquerque, NM. She edited a collection of essays on public art, Visually Speaking, was previously the Arts & Lit editor of the Weekly Alibi, and contributes to many other independent publications. When she's not writing, she's walking the bosque, planning her next trip, or writing poetry in bed.