Arts & Entertainment

Joseph Rossano Exhibit At BAM Focuses On Salmon

The exhibit includes a large blown glass salmon sculpture and multimedia presentations.

From Bellevue Arts Museum: School, an exhibition spearheaded and conceptualized by artist Joseph Rossano opens at Bellevue Arts Museum on April 12, 2019. Suspended in the Museum's tallest gallery, the installation features a life-size school of more than 300 salmonid forms, hand-blown by concerned glassmakers from around the world, alongside first hand video accounts from renowned scientists, artists, and native peoples.

The exhibition aims not only to cast light on the diminished state of global salmon and steelhead populations, but to reignite our imagination of what was, and what could be if we act to protect and conserve the beauty and majesty of the natural world. Rossano's project is inspired by the Skagit River, the fourth largest outflow to the Pacific Ocean in the continental United States, and its dwindling run of salmon and steelhead. Once numbering in the millions, the Skagit's salmon stocks now number barely in the tens of thousands. Whereas the river's steelhead population, which once numbered in the tens of thousands, now numbers only in the hundreds. In the fall of 2018, Rossano gathered with artists, scientists, and a community of the concerned at the Museum of Glass to begin creating fish for the exhibition—kicking off a series of making events at venues including Schack Art Center and Hilltop Artists. Glassmakers across the globe were invited to create fish and send them to be silvered by Rossano before joining the exhibition at Bellevue Arts Museum. Once the exhibition concludes at BAM it will travel to other regions of the globe on a circular four year journey. On each stop of its tour, the exhibition's narrative will expand to illuminate the particular issues faced by the region's local fish and rivers before returning for exhibit to the place of its spawning, Museum of Glass, in 2022.Before the school returns to its natal river, a population of makers will strive to exceed a symbolic 2,504 fish—the lowest return of Steelhead to the Skagit River to date—in order to demonstrate how a group of concerned individuals can work together to foment recovery.

Images via Bellevue Arts

Find out what's happening in Bellevuefor free with the latest updates from Patch.