Non-NYMS Event: Curious Allies: Mutualism in Fungi, Parasites, and Carnivores

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Non-NYMS Event: Curious Allies: Mutualism in Fungi, Parasites, and Carnivores

Free – $35.00

Details:

Start:
May 18
End:
October 27
Cost:
Free – $35.00
Event Category:
Website:
https://asba-art.org/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=92618&module_id=563412

Location:

New York Botanical Garderns
2900 Southern Blvd
Bronx, 10458-5126 United States
+ Google Map
Phone:
718.817.8700
View Venue Website

Free Public Event !!

Katy Wang's original painting of Laetiporus cincinnatus
Katy Wang's original painting of Laetiporus cincinnatus

One of New York Mycological Society’s very own members, Katy Wang (katywangstudio.com) has some of their original art work featured in the fifth New York Botanical Garden triennial, which starts on May 18th and runs up and through October 27th.

Curious Allies: Mutualism in Fungi, Parasites and Carnivores, will open at the New York Botanical Garden on May 18, alongside the garden-wide exhibition Wonderland: Curious Nature. Artworks have been selected for this Fifth Triennial by a jury team of Joanna Groarke, Robin Jess, Patricia Jonas, and Susan Mintun. Chosen are 48 artworks from artists in the US, Brazil, Canada, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Japan, South Africa, and the UK. The artworks included illustrate various elements of the theme, examining important and often unobserved relationships fungi, lichens, mycotrophic, parasitic, and carnivorous plants have with other plants and animals. Mushrooms and fungi serve as decomposers, form networks between plants, and can clean up environmental toxins. Lichens are themselves relationships between fungi and a chlorophyll-containing bacteria or algae. Parasitic plants attach directly to a host and draw nutrients from the host, sometimes harming the host. And carnivorous plants supplement nutrients from soil and water with a diet of insects, consuming them for additional nutrients.

All of these organisms develop relationships that are critical to functioning ecosystems, but many times their impact is not fully appreciated. This exhibition hopes to shine a light on the many environmental benefits derived from these mutualistic relationships and new discoveries being made about their impacts.

Artists with work included are: Susan Benjamin, Margaret Best, Jessica Daigle, Rebecca Davies, Maria Alice deRezende, Ronda Dick, Shevaun Doherty, Jean Emmons, Akiko Enokido, Christiane Fashek, Lara Gastinger, Janet Goltz, Prerna Gupta, Yoko Harada, Erika Hargesheimer, Albina P. Herron, Asuka Hishiki, Ann Hoffenberg, Mariko Ikeda, Mieko Ishikawa, Karen Kluglein, Patricia Luppino, Lucy Martin, Tammy S. McEntee, Sarah Morrish, Eunike Nugroho, Barbara Oozeerally, Nina Petrochko, Sengmany Phommachakr, Linda Powers, Theresa Ream, Gillian Rice, Betsy Rogers-Knox, Daleen Roodt, Elaine Searle, Beverly Simone, Kim Spink, Jane Sturgeon, Rose Torres, Donnett Vanek, Janene Walkky, Yuan Yuan Wang, Carol Woodin, and Fatima Zagonel.
In I have two paintings in the show. The show is located in Ross Gallery, which is located on the side entrance of the Mertz Library building.

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Non-NYMS Event:  Curious Allies: Mutualism in Fungi, Parasites, and Carnivores
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