![Voyage to the South Seas: Flora Otaheite, 1989 [51.E.202]](/images/Floor51/17.jpg)
Michelle Stuart (American, b. 1933)
Voyage to the South Seas: Flora Otaheite, 1989 [51.E.202]
Color etching, aquatint, and chine collé 26 ¾ x 33 in.; 29 x 36 in. framed
Michelle Stuart uses a wide variety of artistic practices —large-scale earthworks, rubbings, collages, drawings, photography, and sculpture—to record the natural world and the impact that humans have on the environment. Maps, cartography, and scientific documentation are prominent throughout Stuart’s work. As a child, she accompanied her father as he surveyed waterlines in southern California and later, during the Korean War, Stuart worked as a topographical draftsperson for the US Army Corps of Engineers.
For Stuart, maps contain valuable information about the social and physical history of a place. According to the artist, the notion of scientific conquest is limiting; instead, Stuart prefers the exploration of new conceptual spaces and alternative cosmologies, that may lead to an expanded idea of the existing connections between ideas and people.
Stuart’s work can be found in collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Dia Art Foundation, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts Houston; the Art Institute of Chicago; Glenstone, Potomac; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and many others.
More information about Michelle Stuart can be found here:
https://michellestuartstudio.com/
https://hirshhorn.si.edu/explore/at-home-on-art-and-exploration-artist-talk-with-michelle-stuart/