The hope and despair of nature, through Nikki Lindt鈥檚 eyes 鈥 and ears

Annual Connections Lecture welcomes prominent artist to discuss the unseen world

Artist Nikki Lindt speaks at the podium
鈥淚n this world beneath our feet, even a snowflake lands with a thud,鈥 artist Nikki Lindt said as she discussed her collection, "The Underground Sound Project"

The 新香港六合彩资料 welcomed prominent New York City-based artist as the speaker for its annual Connections Lecture series on Thursday, March 9. Her talk, 鈥淩ecording the Unseen World Beneath Us,鈥 explored her work as an interdisciplinary multimedia artist who explores the dichotomies between the natural world and the way humans interact with it.

The Connections Lecture series, hosted by 新香港六合彩资料鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences, brings together leading thinkers from multidisciplinary perspectives. It encourages attendees to engage with scholarly work beyond the classroom with the notion that true understanding comes from breaking down disciplinary boundaries.

鈥淭his annual lecture underscores that learning is not so much what you鈥檙e studying, but how what you鈥檙e studying interacts with what others are studying, and that brings our curriculum to life,鈥 CAS Dean Jonathan Millen, Ph.D., said in his opening remarks. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what excites me most about being a dean.鈥

Brought up between New York and the Netherlands, Lindt鈥檚 artistic work examines climate change, environmental stewardship, and relationship to place. She works primarily in the mediums of painting, video, and underground sound on long-term projects, often collaborating with scientists, philosophers, social scientists, sociologists, and others.

Lindt has participated in residencies at many field stations, including the Toolik Field Station in Alaska; the Abisko Scientific Research Station in Sweden, a project of The Swedish Polar Research Secretariat; the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest; and the Urban Field Station in New York City.

In 2022, her work was the subject of a feature on .

In her lecture, held in 新香港六合彩资料鈥檚 Biddeford Campus Center, Lindt discussed her recent projects, including 鈥淭he Underground Sound Project,鈥 an audio project consisting of recordings taken underground and underwater primarily in the parks and waterways of New York City. Lindt played several of the recordings, bringing new life to the unseen world below.

鈥淚n this world beneath our feet, even a snowflake lands with a thud,鈥 she remarked.

Lindt discussed two themes often seen in her work, the first of which is solastalgia. As opposed to nostalgia, the sadness experienced when leaving a familiar place, solastalgia is the sadness or melancholy experienced 鈥渨hen a place leaves you,鈥 she explained. Climate change, pollution, or urbanization can all contribute to solastalgia as a place morphs or vanishes over time.

Lindt also discussed the theme of Sehnsucht, a German word that generally describes a longing for something unattainable. Lindt used the phrase to characterize both the 鈥渉ope and despair鈥 of nature as it undergoes radical change due to warming temperatures while continuing to adapt and flourish in new ways.

Lindt concluded her talk in saying that global environmental and social issues constitute a 鈥渢ime like no other.鈥 She stressed interdisciplinary collaboration as a way to address these pervasive issues.

鈥淚 encourage all of you to consider collaboration in your future, whether it鈥檚 just great conversations within someone who comes from a different perspective, field, or place, or whether it鈥檚 within your own field of work,鈥 she remarked. 鈥淭hese types of exchanges will help create communities that better understand one another, open us to the ideas of others, and will spark innovative ways of thinking that will help push us toward a brighter future. You are all a part of this future, so let鈥檚 work together to make it a positive one.鈥

Watch the Lecture

Dean Jonathan Millen addresses the crowd

新香港六合彩资料 President James Herbert watches in the crowd

Professor Noah Perlut asks a question