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We look forward to learning with the following artists in 2025
Click on images to see their work

Brain Waves

Alexis Williams

Alexis Williams,
Ottawa, Canada
Director of the Biophilium

As a lifelong lucid dreamer and wakeful aphantasic I have been fascinated by liminal spaces especially those concerned with banal altered states like hypnagogia, those fleeting daily moments where we can exist simultaneously in different worlds and forget completely who or when we are.

My work often directs my viewers’ attention to the limits of our senses or the amorphic edges of our selves. Inviting them to experience their world with the senses of another, in order to let them see how arbitrary our own points of view are. My love of ritual that facilitates transformation has led me to participate in international spiritual practices, science workshops and intensive wildlife expeditions in search of the epiphanies and paradigm shifts ushered by immersive learning. I make work that pulls from magic and science like guided meditations, hypnosis and transformation masks that use electronics to alter the wearers perceptions.

wild LIz

Liz Guertin, Columbia, MD
Biophilium Teacher's Assistant

My mission in life is to connect people to the outdoors. To foster that connection so that we may protect wild places. It's been the defining purpose in my work as an outdoor leader, teacher, activist, and now, as an artist. While I'm new to art, I am not new to the inspiration, or to the daily pursuit of wild experiences.

With respect to photography, I've spent the last year on a serious, daily effort to photograph birds in their natural surroundings. Learning about light, bird behavior, songs, calls, aperture, shutter speed, and my own personal vision has given me a new perspective on the natural world. And now, as my work turns more abstract, I’m focused on capturing the essence of birds and their habitat -- to present something others want to experience. My work is at its best when it contains a mix of the literal, the mysterious, and my wonder, all at the same time.

Building this project over the last year has been a life-force for me and my community. Through such a difficult time, we can find connection in the beauty of the wild things in our own backyards. I can't bring the people to wild places, so I bring the wild places to the people.

Stacy
Stacy Fahrion
, Centennial, CO
Composer, pianist, educator, just intonation enthusiast

In a 2018 interview, after writing an album of solo piano pieces called Lullabies for Arachnophobes, I was asked what I was going to do next. I responded that I was going to write an album of music for spiders that are afraid of humans. While I was half-joking, studies of non-human animals, particularly studies of how they experience sound, fascinate me, and non-human created sounds are my inspiration more than any
other music.

My music is often inspired by things like learning about the mating rituals of jumping spiders, or how ogre spiders “listen” to vibrations.
Another recent piece was inspired by imagining trees communicating through mycorrhizal networks. Something I want to do next is write a piece inspired by the rhythm of crickets at night. Lately I’m very interested in letting my music feel like it is growing organically, letting the structure and melodies of my recent music often slowly evolve with slight variations.

One of the reasons my music in the past three years has all been in just intonation is that I believe that the infinite variety of microtones one can
draw from the harmonic series better represent the beautiful diversity in nature. Equal temperament, what has become the standard tuning today, is much less resonant and colorful than music that uses exact partials from the harmonic series.

I’m always curious to learn from and connect with scientists and other artists who are inspired by both science and nature.

Anne
Anne Rainwater
, Palo Alto, California
Pianist, educator, curator, writer

My work explores hidden and overt moments of musical joy, wonder and whimsy. I enjoy probing the boundaries of time, speed and density as they reflect our frenetic, modern experiences. I gravitate towards works that include movement, electronics, vocalization, and extended pianistic techniques, and I particularly delight in exploring dense textures in contemporary and Baroque pieces. In my writing and teaching, I foster a detailed understanding of a work’s structural and expressive trajectory. As a performer, I guide audiences towards a deeper, collective experience, from moments of introspection to outward exhilaration. I am interested in the intersection of nature and music, particularly as it relates to the parallels between thriving ecosystems and optimal systems of learning and performing music. As someone who cares deeply about the Earth, I am a member of Beyond Artists, an organization whose members pledge to donate portions of their performance fees to organizations they support and care about.

 

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Ashley Czajkowski,
Arizona
Mortem Expedition Leader and TA
Professor of Death and Photography at Arizona State University

The human relationship with nature is a tenuous one. We are at once a part of the natural world, yet intentionally set apart from it. I am interested in this disconnect; our refusal as a species to admit that we, too, are animals. There is a sense of savagery that comes with being an animal, being wild. We have been taught to become something other, to become domesticated. There is loss in this becoming. Though all experience this (false) dichotomy between humans and nature, the accepted social construction of femininity is much further removed from the nature of the human animal.

Historically, women who exhibited wild, uncontrollable, or generally undesirable behavior were considered dangerous and mentally unstable. Witch hunts and medical disorders like hysteria illustrate the collective psychoanalytical fear of the “female monster,” and this chastising of unbecoming female behavior lingers to this day. Because femininity is the gender I learned to perform first-hand, the relationship of women and nature is highlighted in my work, drawing connections to sensuality, fertility and the maternal instinct.

Exploring these intrinsic, wild tendencies deep-seated in us all challenges societal expectations of women and men, our relationship to the natural world, our own corporeal existence, and ultimately, our mortality. I'm interested in how harnessing these innate primal desires presents the possibility of reclamation; of re-wilding the human, of unbecoming.

Tanya

Tawhida Tanya Evanson
, Montreal

My work is an exploration of African diasporic identity, Sufi spirituality, and the human condition in resistance to Western values. It begins in literature and traverses various art forms: poetry, autofiction, orality, music, film and multimedia. The goal is to reunite literature with its
sonic, mystical and spiritual roots as a healing practice for self and humanity.

I walk in the tradition of the multidisciplinary West African griots who combine the role of historian, storyteller, praise singer, poet and musician; and am a student of Sufism which includes mystical practices around poetry, music and prayer.

The Invisible World as real. Writing as prayer. Orality as sacred act. Music and meditation at the divine centre.

RohiniRohini Maiti, Mumbai,

I am an anti-disciplinary artist whose work blends installation, media, and community-driven projects to document, connect, and transform people, places, and ideas. My practice explores the intersection of cognitive science, consciousness, and spirituality, engaging with the ephemeral and immaterial qualities of human experience. I approach art as both a process and observation, seeking to understand how we learn, grow, and adapt in an uncertain world.

Drawing on transgressive performance, philosophical frameworks, and interdisciplinary research, my work delves into the tension between external knowledge and internal perception. Through materials sourced from waste and neglected objects, I create spaces and experiences that invite viewers to reflect on transformation, agency, and the possibilities of slow change.

Informed by a background in music and illustration, my practice explores the transformative potential of art as a space for catalyzing cognitive phenomena. Whether through lens-based work, kinetic sculptures, or socially engaged projects, I aim to prototype systems that trigger moments of change, guiding both myself and my audience through processes of self-discovery and collective experience.

 

 

Kindra Crick
Kindra Crick, Portland, OR

My work explores the intersection of science and art, and the creative possibilities that emerge from the cross-pollination of our material and imagined worlds. Through collaborations with scientists and research, I create dynamic installations along with layered mixed-media work that incorporates drawings, diagrams, maps and imagery from under the microscope.
I’m especially fascinated by the human brain - our complex machine - which can fathom the beginning of time and the nature of its own thought. However, even after centuries of study, scientists are only now starting to chart the mysterious biological map of that thought.

My interests lie in the biological bases of that which seem visceral and intangible — ideas, sleep, memory, and empathy. I’m inspired by cutting-edge neuroscience research with its missteps and conjecture; other times ideas emerge from articles I’ve read that have been slowly percolating until they finally rise to the surface. An artistic rendering of scientific information requires an acceptance of the inherent and often unpredictable nature of discovery: my artwork investigates how and where these worlds might intertwine and mingle.

Kristy StevensKristy Stevens, Falkland, Scotland

Visual Artist and Designer, Kirsty Stevens was studying Jewellery and Metal Design at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, and was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS), a lifelong condition affecting the brain and central nervous system. Determined to make something positive out of this negative diagnosis she began using her own MRI scans to create unexpected patterns inspired by the harmful lesions on the brain.

In 2014 she founded ‘CHARCOT’, a surface pattern design label, named after the French Neurologist, Jean-Martin Charcot, who discovered MS in 1868. This allowed her to lease prints around the world and speak at international events. Throughout her extended lockdown during the pandemic due to being immunocompromised, she fully lent into ‘crip time’ and embraced the slower pace and beauty of drawing. This led to a new creative practice within visual arts, drawing what Stevens envisions is happening inside her body and what symptoms she can experience daily. This new slower and considered practice has enabled her to realise what she wants to show and say within her work, to raise awareness and open a dialogue about invisible illness, while she works through her own lived experience of Multiple Sclerosis.

Speicies
2025

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Shelly Smith,

Biophilium Research Leader

Washington DC

My paintings are based on microscopic life I find in water samples taken from all over the world. My process includes collecting water samples, documenting the site locations, and observing the contents with a laboratory microscope. I work both from direct live observation as well as from a series of videos and pictures I record via my microscope camera.

The work I produce is inspired by the tradition of scientific illustration and popular decorative motifs. Done in pen and ink with gouache washes, the illustrated paintings reflect the protozoa, diatoms, algae, and other microscopic life that lives in abundance, hidden from the naked eye but a vital part of our living world. The jewel like beauty of microorganisms sparkles through in glistening colors and metallic sheen, with bold line work reflecting the outlines of these small creatures under a slide.

Catheine
Catherine Slilaty
, Montreal, QC

Stemming from a desire to explore the self as an organism of flux, my work explores the lives of speculative creatures able to transform themselves to adapt to their environment. Inspired by microorganisms, plant life, and the interior structures of organic life, I use monsters and creatures as portals to access parts of ourselves which are intrinsically linked to nature: a site where curiosity, wonder, anguish, and survival instincts collide. As a queer, neurodivergent second-generation immigrant, many aspects of my identity fall into the in-between. I’ve always been drawn to the monster in all forms of media: the othered hybrid, the outcast creature unable to be anything but its unapologetic self, undeniably powerful and free, existing outside of social conventions. I found freedom and healing through the ways monsters have always tended to embrace dread and desire head-on, through radical self-making and resilience. I see these beings as vessels for Othered bodies, allowing access to catharsis by embracing transformation: an ever-evolving, fluid and full self. My current work is focused on the evolutionary jump between the inert and the living: how the organization of matter forming organic life came to be. I’m seeking to blend the latest scientific findings on these topics with a playful speculative approach through animation and drawing.

rebecca
Rebecca Krinke, White Bear Lake, MN

I have a hybrid life as a visual artist and professor of landscape architecture; these two threads in my work have recently been reaching a new symbiosis. “Earthling School” is the conceptual umbrella that has emerged for my creative practice, research, and teaching which focuses on the Earth, the cosmos, the human and nonhuman world (including NHI) and deepening all relationships between - including those with each other.

Three initiatives were key to developing Earthling School:
1) personal and collaborative work with two biological field stations,
2) a long collaboration with Indigenous and Settler colleagues with the latest being the Two Eyed Seeing and Third Spaces group I convene. (“Two-Eyed Seeing” means to see with the lens of Indigenous and Western science at the same time, for the benefit of all.)
3) my visual art that emerged from a powerful dream I had as an adult. I interpreted the origin dream as a bear that visited. Since then, I have had three sequential dreams with animals: a frog/tadpole, raptor, and octopus that I have explored in my installations. I also draw upon my many anomalous experiences to create places to share with others in which intuition, psychic events, and dreams are brought forth as powerful ways of learning and knowing.

 

Catherine

Catherine Euale, Canada, Mexico

Catherine Euale is a textile artist, social justice and environmental activist, costume designer and storyteller. In her practice, she challenges the need to use materials and methods that are noncompatible with living systems. She believes deepening and shifting our relationships with the material can raise awareness of our forgotten relationships within more than human worlds, planting seeds for a “good Anthropocene”. Designing systems for interspecies worlds can ignite tremendous political, social, and philosophical implications that we must consider for a resilient and harmonious future.

Luci

 

Luci Jockel, Baltimore, MD

I make mementos from responsibly-sourced animal remains to honor and grieve the loss of our nonhuman counterparts. Similar to historic mourning ritualistic objects and relics, I explore the agency of remains and wearables to carry memories of past lives and relationships. The tangibility allows us to remain connected to those beyond, preserve their stories and reflect on their lives.

Using materials, such as animal remains, stone and metal, the artist and viewer become physically tied to their surroundings and asked to remember their dependence on the earth. By investigating the quiet intersections between unearthed materials, I attempt to understand the bigger story- the web connecting all beings. My work questions the hierarchical systems of value created around materials and beings, of which we share a common resting ground.

Monika
Monika Kinner
,
Saskatoon / Jackfish Lake (both in Treaty Six Territory)

Monika Kinner (b. 1970) is an interdisciplinary artist based in Saskatoon, Canada. Working with fibre art, analog photographic processes, spoken word, installation, and what she describes as, 'en plein air poetry', Kinner explores the intricate relationships between humans and the natural world.

Delving into the concepts of confinement & resistance, diversity & vitality, displacement & kinship, communication & reciprocity, regeneration & transformation, Kinner draws on life experience, deep observations, and formal education. Overlapping Humanities with Botanical Science, Kinner offers a unique perspective paralleling the interconnectedness of the human / flora experience.

Deeply inspired by her Motherline, she strives to explore the universal themes of identity, communication, memory, and belonging specifically through a lens of non-hierarchical, non-violent reciprocity. She considers the Prairie her Muse, and the Bees her Mentors.

Ashlee c

Ashley Czajkowski,
Arizona Expedition Leader and TA
Professor of Death and Photography at Arizona State University

The human relationship with nature is a tenuous one. We are at once a part of the natural world, yet intentionally set apart from it. I am interested in this disconnect; our refusal as a species to admit that we, too, are animals. There is a sense of savagery that comes with being an animal, being wild. We have been taught to become something other, to become domesticated. There is loss in this becoming. Though all experience this (false) dichotomy between humans and nature, the accepted social construction of femininity is much further removed from the nature of the human animal.

Historically, women who exhibited wild, uncontrollable, or generally undesirable behavior were considered dangerous and mentally unstable. Witch hunts and medical disorders like hysteria illustrate the collective psychoanalytical fear of the “female monster,” and this chastising of unbecoming female behavior lingers to this day. Because femininity is the gender I learned to perform first-hand, the relationship of women and nature is highlighted in my work, drawing connections to sensuality, fertility and the maternal instinct.

Exploring these intrinsic, wild tendencies deep-seated in us all challenges societal expectations of women and men, our relationship to the natural world, our own corporeal existence, and ultimately, our mortality. I'm interested in how harnessing these innate primal desires presents the possibility of reclamation; of re-wilding the human, of unbecoming.

ouy

 

Meg Nicks, Alberta

As a visual artist, the intricate details of nature are captivating. Natureʼs flow and rhythms and the interconnectivity of its patterns and design are subjects for art. The mountain environment is my major focus, an apparently solid, but infinitely changeable environment, where life, tough yet fragile, prospers in a severe world. We must look closely to appreciate all that is here. Flowers, mosses, lichen. The black patterns on aspen trees. Salamanders and seeds. Even the rusting of artifacts left behind.


 

rewild


Mary Abma
, Bright's Grove, Ontario
Biophilium Teacher's Assistant
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Mary Abma is a versatile artist who specializes in community-engaged artworks and environmental art. Always up for new challenges, Mary seeks constantly to push the edges of her practice and to learn new skills and information. Her artworks, which consist primarily of idea-based works executed in a variety of artistic forms, explore the theme of “place”. Her work embraces her interest in history, her concern for the environment, her passion for science, and her desire to find visual expression for her insights into the living world and the interconnectedness of systems. Mary’s recent works explore the systems of language and communication within the natural world.

catherine


Catherine Euale
, Canada, Mexico

Catherine Euale is a textile artist, social justice and environmental activist, costume designer and storyteller. In her practice, she challenges the need to use materials and methods that are noncompatible with living systems. She believes deepening and shifting our relationships with the material can raise awareness of our forgotten relationships within more than human worlds, planting seeds for a “good Anthropocene”. Designing systems for interspecies worlds can ignite tremendous political, social, and philosophical implications that we must consider for a resilient and harmonious future.

uy
Suus Agnes Claessen
, Holland

I am an author-illustrator and comics artist with a background in science communication, literary studies, and beekeeping. My work takes a particular interest in environmental ethics and the underdog. As a PhD candidate at the Centre for Sustainability, Otago University, New Zealand, I currently work on a graphic novel about human relationships with 'unloved' microcommunities of invertebrates, moss, and fungi. This is part of my interdisciplinary research that explores visual narrative as a method for cultivating attentiveness to nonhumans.

I look for ways to better coexist with my environments through different ways of knowing them —from folklore and myth to traditional and contemporary ecological knowledges— and let these stories colour my daily observations and actions, as I’m learning to read my surroundings intimately; perhaps even communicate with them. Who am I to them? Who responds to the seeds and spores I spread?

By engaging story and sense in processes of getting to know other beings, my creative practice seeks to bring them to wider cultural imaginations. It’s too easy to overlook or disregard them as backdrops to human life. By reviving forgotten wisdoms, I wish to contribute to a broader recognition of nonhumans in all shapes and sizes, not just for their importance and wondrousness, but also as life forms in their own rights, alive and aware, creatures full of story and for who things matter.

Luci

 

Luci Jockel, Baltimore, MD

I make mementos from responsibly-sourced animal remains to honor and grieve the loss of our nonhuman counterparts. Similar to historic mourning ritualistic objects and relics, I explore the agency of remains and wearables to carry memories of past lives and relationships. The tangibility allows us to remain connected to those beyond, preserve their stories and reflect on their lives.

Using materials, such as animal remains, stone and metal, the artist and viewer become physically tied to their surroundings and asked to remember their dependence on the earth. By investigating the quiet intersections between unearthed materials, I attempt to understand the bigger story- the web connecting all beings. My work questions the hierarchical systems of value created around materials and beings, of which we share a common resting ground.

 
Mortem

iug
Ashley Czajkowski,
Arizona Mortem Expedition Leader and TA
Professor of Death and Photography at Arizona State University

The human relationship with nature is a tenuous one. We are at once a part of the natural world, yet intentionally set apart from it. I am interested in this disconnect; our refusal as a species to admit that we, too, are animals. There is a sense of savagery that comes with being an animal, being wild. We have been taught to become something other, to become domesticated. There is loss in this becoming. Though all experience this (false) dichotomy between humans and nature, the accepted social construction of femininity is much further removed from the nature of the human animal.

Historically, women who exhibited wild, uncontrollable, or generally undesirable behavior were considered dangerous and mentally unstable. Witch hunts and medical disorders like hysteria illustrate the collective psychoanalytical fear of the “female monster,” and this chastising of unbecoming female behavior lingers to this day. Because femininity is the gender I learned to perform first-hand, the relationship of women and nature is highlighted in my work, drawing connections to sensuality, fertility and the maternal instinct.

Exploring these intrinsic, wild tendencies deep-seated in us all challenges societal expectations of women and men, our relationship to the natural world, our own corporeal existence, and ultimately, our mortality. I'm interested in how harnessing these innate primal desires presents the possibility of reclamation; of re-wilding the human, of unbecoming.

Alyssa


Alyssa Ellis
, Alberta
Biophilium Expedition Leader

Ellis is an Albertan born artist who has an ongoing love affair with botanical poison. She studies, documents and seeks out poisonous plants that can be found growing naturally within the province of Alberta. Through the process of her work, she studies the relationships between plants and people, and the dependence one has on the other.

“I’m in a constant ongoing, revolving and dissolving love affair with botanical life. We work together, play together and by all means narrate together in order to further develop our complicated relationship. While multidisciplinary in nature, the experimental research of our stories fluctuates between textiles, drawing, performance and installation. Despite always connecting back to the idea of plant storytelling, I strive to do nothing more than to unearth stories that delve into nature’s darker side.”

 
 

 

Alumni

We have had the absolute pleasure of learning with hundreds of amazing artists over the years. You can find them here. Click on a topic to see all of the Biophilium and Ayatana artists who have been research fellows and artists in residence with us since 2014.

COGNITION Biophilia Mortem

Mycophilia pLANT SCHOOL Bird school

aQUATIC LIFE microscopy sWARM

aIR AND SKY nocturn gEOPHILIA

obscure