|  On exhibit at Wild Hearts Gallery in Placitas, NM July 29-August 25, 2019
 Artist’s statement              If you don’t believe the climate is changing, take a trip to  any American Western National Park.  Go in the summer, when a choking smoky haze burns your eyes. Or just avoid  going outside at home, a thousand miles away, because the air quality is  impacted by those wildfires.Revisit a beloved mountain and wonder at the new snow  pattern after a fire. Go back to a favorite campground and find it barren of  shade. Colorful wildflowers are beautiful but they won’t shelter your tent.
  Wade through the mud and climb over debris left by a flash  flood that devastated a tiny community after its forest burned. Pull a battered  Torah out of the mud and place it by your door to remember the power of water.  Peel the bark off a dead tree to find intricate channels  left by busy bark beetle larvae.  Yes, there is a beauty in death. Georgia O’Keeffe found it  in the bones of drought-killed cattle.  I see it in dead trees.  And weep for what we are losing.  
 Observation:               In July 2018 we took a road trip from New Mexico to Whidbey  Island. Most of it was on “blue highways” and unpaved roads, through National  Parks and forests. Temperatures across the West were above “normal.” Some broke  records. Major forest fires raged in British Columbia, Washington, Oregon,  Northern California, and Montana. A smoky haze filtered out the blue sky and  irritated our eyes and lungs. Glacier National Park was clogged with families rushing  to see what is left of the glaciers. Everywhere we saw dead and dying trees.             I pondered the changes in our forests over the past few  decades: our loss of millions of piñons, ponderosas, spruce and fir. How can we  ignore this?   This body of work is a response to my question:  “What is happening and how bad is it?”Ask the Trees.
 Process: 
              “When you learn to paint a dead  tree, you can paint anything.”—Marie Utt Hoal, my 7th grade  art teacher.
 I’m still learning.
  In considering this question, I decided to explore different  media starting with Rozome, a  Japanese technique of layering dye resisted by wax on silk. I continued with  cold wax and oil on art panel. Finally I decided to allow the trees themselves  to speak. Peeling the bark from beetle-killed saplings revealed intricate  tunnels (galleries) as lovely to me as illuminated manuscripts or elaborate  tattoos, their meaning unfiltered by human language or image-making. These  pieces contain the tree’s life history from seedling to death due to warmer  temperatures, drought and insects.  Ask the Trees. —Dorothy  Bunny Bowen, July 2019
             Interview by Clark Condé in Alibi Magazine, August 8 2019 
 These are details of some of the pieces in the show; To see the full piece click on the images.
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