Ceres Gallery will present RIGHTS OF NATURE, a collection of paintings, sculptures and video by Elizabeth Downer Riker, September 5-30, 2023. The exhibition will feature her oil paintings, that offer an ironic critique of the devastating effects of climate change. Her sculptures highlight the ubiquitous presence of plastics in our lives and our oceans. And her video work offers hope for a way forward by looking into the past.
The exhibition will host an in-person reception and a virtual opening where visitors unable to attend in person can view the works and meet Ms. Riker, as well as a video of the show.
“For 500 years the modern system, that has shaped the world we live in, has looked at nature as something to be exploited regardless of the consequences. In contrast, indigenous cultures have seen themselves as part of nature and advocated for a deep respect for the environment. The Rights of Nature movement is trying to enshrine that respect for nature into law,” Riker said. “With this exhibit, I hope to call attention to the ways in which burning fossil fuels, cutting down forests, the industrial farming of livestock and agriculture are damaging our planet, as well as to highlight what we can do to stop this threat to life on Earth.”
About Elizabeth Downer Riker
The artist, born in Boston and raised in Paris, started out as a filmmaker, studying at NYU’s graduate film program. After discovering her love for painting, she studied at the Art Students League in Manhattan. Riker lived for many years in the Central Valleys region of Oaxaca, Mexico where she painted people working the land. On her return to New York in 2011, she began a series of paintings of rooftop farms and community gardens to celebrate the greening of cities. She is an artist member of the Salmagundi Club.
Inspired by Climate Change Activists and the Surrealists
Riker’s teenage daughter joined the Fridays for Future youth movement and protested for global action on climate change at the UN for over 72 weeks. Watching her child make the decision to walk out of school because she perceived her future on this planet was at imminent risk made Riker want to use her art to highlight the issue. Searching for a language that could inspire people about a subject that often feels despairing, she looked to the Surrealists for creative and humorous depictions of reality. Drawing on the work of artists such as Magritte, Frida Kahlo, and Meret Oppenheim, Riker was also inspired by the indigenous resistance to deforestation and extraction as well as the climate activism of Greta Thunberg and Extinction Rebellion. Riker supports the Rights of Nature movement whose goal is to protect nature – rivers, mountains and entire ecosystems – by recognizing their inherent legal rights.
In the adjoining space: Refuge and Peril in the Borderlands
Jane Seavers’ collection of oil paintings is inspired by the courage of today’s immigrants making a life and death journey across unforgiving terrain to find refuge for themselves and their families.
Born in Wisconsin and raised on a multi-generational dairy farm, Jane has lived in Silver City, New Mexico with her family since 1983. Silver City is just 90 miles north of our international border with Mexico. In her paintings, she tries to bring awareness of the complexity of beauty, mystery, danger and hardship of the landscape as it relates to families there seeking safety.
Ceres Gallery promotes contemporary women artists, supports diverse artistic and political views, and encourages risk-taking by artists in all disciplines.
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