mattingly-owns-still-000-500x281.jpg

Mary Mattingly

Building urban ecologies that address food, water, and shelter through sculpture and storytelling drives my artwork. I co-create sculptural ecosystems in public spaces, often with ecologists, engineers, students, stewards, and with input from neighbors. Public art can strengthen common spaces, working between policy, community groups, and the built environment through long-term engagement.

 After analyzing my personal consumption and the material supply and waste chains of the tools I use, I began making interdependent ecosystems from material waste as a way to reimagine the public sphere. In 2016 I led a free, floating food forest on a barge in the public waters of New York in order to circumvent public land laws. In a food-insecure city, these laws have made it illegal to pick food in the 30,000 acres of public space. It is on its way to becoming a permanent public park in Brooklyn, and has spearheaded the “foodway” a 24-hour public greenway in Concrete Plant Park, the Bronx, where people can harvest edible plants for free.

Projects like this have grown and changed with inputs from neighbors, and that’s the most exciting part about building together: we all have diverse ideas to bring to the table.  For guidance, I often look to a manifold group of activist-writers, with re-occurring voices who include Wendell Berry, Judith Butler, Dorothy Day, Amitav Ghosh, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Elinor Ostrom, Edward Said, and Vandana Shiva. I believe the process of co-creating ecosystems reimagines creative ways of being with the objects we use, as well as the land, plants, animals, and each other.

www.marymattingly.com