The exhibit Plankton in Our Midst: The Unseen Citizens of the Sea and Our Breathing Earth explores the exquisite beauty of plankton and its crucial role not only in ocean ecosystems, but in how ocean health is critical to our survival and elemental to all life on our planet. The work of artists Krisanne Baker and Julie Crane and conservation writer Liz Cunningham converge to create an engaging offering of glass installations, paintings and sculptures which amplify the intricate beauty of plankton and show how it is vital to the survival of larger creatures such as blue crabs, harbor seals, terns and whales.

We humbly acknowledge that where we dwell, what is now called Maine, is home to the sovereign people of the Wabanaki Confederacy. We exist on their unceded homelands.

The exhibit will be at the Rockport Public Library in Rockport, Maine from November 2 through November 30, 2024. An exhibit catalog, with a foreword by Michael Lomas, PhD, Senior Research Scientist at Bigelow Laboratory of Ocean Sciences, is available at the exhibit and as a PDF download.

About the exhibit

 Inspiration to protect life in a time of ecological crises

Julie Crane Sandpiper
Click to view image

While often overlooked, plankton are fundamental to life on our planet. They are key to aquatic ecosystems, the survival of larger creatures such as bears, seabirds, seals and whales, and the carbon cycle which keeps our precious biosphere habitable. Plankton in Our Midst explores this interdependence at the crossroads between art, science and conservation writing. Implicit in this exploration is the reciprocity at the heart of our breathing earth, an idea deeply understood by Indigenous traditions and recognized by science. Integral to it are the exchanges of oxygen and carbon dioxide which drive changing seasons, animal migrations, and the interconnectedness by which life thrives. Plankton in Our Midst is a window into the world of plankton and the rhythms of our breathing earth, offering fresh inspiration to protect and nurture life in a time of massive ecological crises.

about us

Liz cunningham

Liz Cunningham is the author of numerous articles and the award-winning Ocean Country, with a foreword by Carl Safina. Her mission is to inspire and empower others to protect the life of this planet and achieve social justice. She speaks to a diverse range of audiences, from inner-city high schools to universities and large public venues such as the Commonwealth Club and the New England Aquarium. She is the co-founder of KurtHahn.org, the online archive for the founder of Outward Bound, Kurt Hahn.

Krisanne Baker

Krisanne Baker is an ocean advocacy artist. She creates art, often through science collaborations, about of the contents of the living breathing ocean to spark curiosity in others, educate them about the rights of ocean inhabitants, and inspire stewardship of the Great Blue. Krisanne has had many solo exhibitions and received a multitude of awards and fellowships such as the Bow Seat Educator of the Year and Japan Fulbright Memorial Scholar. She is represented by Caldbeck Gallery. As an educator she developed the Gulf of Maine: Dare to Care curriculum.

Julie Crane

Julie Crane refers to her work as “the songs of spies”the search for truth through what is living, a glimpse into how each creature contributes to the whole of life.  Her work often times juxtaposes microscopic organisms suspended mid-air around a central subject. By switching the scale of objects, the viewer is invited to consider the impact of the invisible and the attributes we share. Her work has appeared in numerous exhibitions in the United States and overseas.

Additional Resources:

Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences supports innovative approaches to study the foundation of global ocean health and unlock its potential to improve the future for all life on our planet.

BIOS-SCOPE is a multi-institutional research for the study of microbial oceanongraphy in the North Atlantic Ocean. It leverages the research at the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS) site.

The focus of research in the Chisholm Laboratory is the marine microorganism, Prochlorococcus. This microbe is the dominant primary producer in the oceans, the smallest known phototroph, and the most abundant photosynthetic cell on the planet.

Richard Kirby (Plankton Pundit) is an independent scientist, filmmaker and expedition scientist/guide. A former Royal Society university research fellow, his scientific interest is the plankton food web and how it is influenced by climate, fishing and plastic pollution.  

The Marine Biological Laboratory’s Oceanic Flux Program (OFP) studies particle fluxes in the deep Sargasso Sea. It is the longest-running time-series of its kind, now spanning over four decades of continuous measurement.

Christian Sardet is the co-founder and scientific coordinator of the Tara Ocean Expedition devoted to the global study of plankton. Sardet initiated the Plankton Chronicles project with the Macronautes. He is the author of Plankton: Wonders of the Drifting World.

 

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