Official newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin

The Daily Texan

Official newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin

The Daily Texan

Official newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin

The Daily Texan

Advertise in our classifieds section
Your classified listing could be here!
October 4, 2022
LISTEN IN

Exhibitions plumb artistic responses to disaster

NEW YORK — Coke Wisdom O’Neal looked at the soggy, stained and discolored photographs strewn about his Brooklyn studio by the salty floodwaters of Superstorm Sandy, sure there was nothing he could do to salvage them. But as he began cleaning up, he became intrigued by the transformation of a series of old family slides into cloud-like watercolors with human figures still discernible.

Now those Kodachromes, reinvented by nature, are part of an exhibition in Manhattan of art inspired by Sandy, a phenomenon that is being included in a larger look at how artists respond creatively to disasters, such as the 2011 tornado in Tuscaloosa, Ala., and California’s devastating
2007 wildfires.

“The storm destroyed tools, books, old artwork, drawings and unfinished work,” O’Neal said. “They now feel to me like objects that were holding me back from going forward.”


The “After Effects” exhibition, featuring 36 storm-inspired works by 23 artists, opens Friday at the Chashama gallery in the Chelsea neighborhood. The show is curated by the New York Foundation for the Arts, which is assisting artists whose livelihoods suffered storm losses. 

Deborah Luken, of the Long Island community of Long Beach, is showing an oil painting that she started before the storm and “took on a life of its own.”

Conceived originally as an image of a spiral galaxy, it evolved into a work depicting the storm when she “realized that the patterns were very similar to that of a hurricane — the eye in the center and the spiral winds around it,” she said.

Craig Nutt, director of programs for the Craft Emergency Relief Fund, a national nonprofit that helps artists in need, said he has long been intrigued by the art community’s response
to disaster.

“Artists and arts organizations have the skills and capacity to craft recovery projects that address the less tangible cultural and psychological recovery needs of a community,” Nutt wrote in an email, citing concerts, exhibitions and public art.

After a tornado blew down thousands of homes in Tuscaloosa, resident and nonprofit program manager Jean Mills launched “Beauty Amid Destruction,” a public art project featuring banners installed along the debris field. About 50 artists nationwide donated works, something Mills said helped some local artists “jump-start their energy.”

For John Gordon Gauld, a Brooklyn artist whose still life depicting the remnants of his flooded studio is featured in “After Effects,” making sense of the loss of materials and works to the storm means embracing it.

O’Neal is still rebuilding his studio but simultaneously readying his psychedelic-like watercolors, which he compares to Andy Warhol’s abstract oxidation paintings, for a solo exhibition in March at Mixed Greens gallery in Chelsea.

More to Discover
Activate Search
Exhibitions plumb artistic responses to disaster