CULVER CITY, CA.- When Kim Abeles had a studio in downtown Los Angeles in the mid-1980s, she was thrilled one day to see a deep bluish wedge appear between two buildings: a sliver of the San Gabriel Mountains, which had for months been obscured by the citys notoriously thick smog.
Abeles, a conceptual artist by training with roots in nature she once lived in a grain silo in Ohio turned her amazement into a project governed by rules of her own making. She set out to photograph that space from her studio fire escape every day until the mountain appeared clearly again. It took a full year and three weeks.
She soon found other ways to approach the wedge. She decided to walk from her studio on Sept. 10, 1987, toward the mountain as the crow flies, she said, until she could actually see it. She had to scale barbed wire fences and cross freeways for what proved to be a strenuous 10-hour, 16.5-mile pilgrimage.
She also experimented that year with a medium that ended up feeding some of her most important work over the last three decades. She cut an image of the mountain wedge into a vinyl sheet covering a Plexiglas plate and set it on the fire escape for a month to gather particulate matter. In effect, the smog drew the image, creating both a record of the pollution she has called herself a stenographer of the skyline and something meaningful, or even beautiful, from it.
How do you represent something like the smog, which always looks like its in someone elses neighborhood? How do you show something so elusive and hard to put your finger on? Abeles, 69, said from a clearing near the top of the Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook in Culver City, California. With a grand view of LA stretching out before her, she sat on a bench next to her 10,000-pound sculpture of a manzanita seed, from her series titled Citizen Seeds. The series was made for the local trail system through a Los Angeles County arts commission and incorporates the handiwork of community members. It was an unnaturally hot day in November, and she pointed to a faint line of pollution in the distance.
Its the same issue with the climate crisis more broadly, she said. We need to identify the problem before we can begin to see our collective or individual roles in solving it.
Her attempts at making the invisible visible, or the abstract tangible, can now be seen in Kim Abeles: Smog Collectors, 1987-2020 at California State University, Fullerton, the fullest presentation of her smog series to date. Art historian Karen Moss, while pointing out that Abeles has also done major work on AIDS/HIV and domestic violence, said that she has been immersed in environmental issues for 30-plus years before other artists jumped in to do what we now call eco-art.
The Fullerton show includes little-known smog drawings on paper, fabric, wood, glass and recycled Plexiglas, starting with that original mountain wedge, as well as her most famous series, commemorative plates of U.S. presidents she made in 1992 by exposing each portrait to the weather for four to 40 days her way of grading each presidents environmental record.
The contrast between Jimmy Carter, whose visage appears faint on the porcelain plate (left outside for eight days), and Ronald Reagan, whose face is dark and smeared with particulate matter (40 days), is especially striking. As she noted, Carter put solar panels on the White House, and Reagan took them down.
While shes better known for public art and community workshops than playing to the international art crowd, Abeles was featured in a 2019 show on the politics of environmental disasters at Moscows Garage Museum. She set out to make a new set of commemorative plates, this time featuring global leaders from Emmanuel Macron to Vladimir Putin. But a Russian maintenance worker who was spooked by Putins dirty plate wiped it clean of all environmental wrongdoing.
Abeles remade it for the Moscow show, and it now appears in her California survey alongside other commemorative plates.
The Fullerton show also features two pandemic-era works: Smog Catcher, a larger-than-life self-portrait made from particulates in 2020; and images of lounge chairs on small wood panels, titled Deck Chairs on the Titanic, made that year while COVID and the Bobcat fire were both raging. The Titanic work is clearly pointed, but its sense of humor and attention to materials she used European beechwood, the same wood as the actual chairs on the ship saves it from seeming too preachy.
Sharing bleak information about climate change without being didactic has become a specialty for the artist, who now lives in Pasadena, California, closer to the San Gabriel Mountains. I love mapping and collecting data, but I dont think thats the real thrust of my work; I think the works are prompts, she said, describing how art can move people to thought or action.
Her oversized seeds, for example, are designed in different ways to connect people to the ground beneath their feet. Do you need art on the trail to get people here? No, she said. But I want you to walk farther, or see more, next time.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.