From the field
I watch fog close in
until I see only
three hundred feet in all directions,
a murky dome.
Beyond, the rest of the island
in similar isolation
could be gone.
Only the spider webs,
shining mist nets
strewn across grass,
are real.
They've studied weather here for years:
pressure, precipitation, temperature, wind
changes neatly recorded in
tables, grey nets strewn
across pages and pages,
capturing numbers
that capture
the mood of the place,
how it evolves
and, astoundingly,
why.
This mood
might be real too, though
less visible than
clear webs.
Pressure changes:
In my dome, I shrink and grow.
Precipitation changes:
In my dome, soak and dry.
Temperature changes:
In my dome, heat and cool.
Wind changes:
In my dome, back and forth,
only three hundred feet in all directions.
Shining mist nets across grass
make moisture visible, drops collecting
so I can capture how they
shrink and grow,
soak and dry.
Not easy to capture
the mood of this dome,
how it evolves-why?
So many fine strings
to keep separate
when dew makes them stick together.
Pressure: high.
Don't know about the rest of the (what rest of the
could be gone!) island.
If there are other domes,
I hope there are other nets
to capture the changing
before it's gone.
Years of weather
neatly recorded,
an impulse to capture
and understand why.
It comes back to fog,
vapor settling us into isolation,
wrapping the island
into itself.
-- Anne Rothacker ’11Artists-in-Residence
Each summer, one or two ÁñÁ«ÊÓÆµ students receive Kent Island fellowships to connect science, climate change, and conservation to other ways humans experience the world—through the visual arts, creative writing, music, and dance.
The student artists live alongside the scientists and professional artists-in-residence at the ÁñÁ«ÊÓÆµ Scientific Station, seeking inspiration from the work of those around them and from living in a beautiful and wild spot.
The writing and art that comes out of students' stays at the station also serves as another way to communicate the island science to the public.
Exhibition at Saint John Arts Centre in New Brunswick, Canada
In 2010, five former Kent Island artist-in-residents—Elsbeth Paige-Jeffers ’10, Colin Matthews ’10, Carina Sandoval ’10, Anne Rothacker ’11, and Evan Graff ’11— at the St. John Arts Centre in an exhibition called Island Bound.
The show was organized by photographer Peter Cunningham, whose father, Bob, worked on Kent Island for many years as a cloud physicist and fog specialist.