Showing posts with label Dr. Roger Payne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Roger Payne. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Dr. Roger Payne and Lisa Harrow present "SEACHANGE: Reversing the Tide", Thursday, July 7 at 7 - 8 p.m. at North Shore Arts

Winslow Homer "West Point, Prout's Neck"

Please join us Thursday, July 7th at 7 p.m. for a presentation by Dr. Roger Payne, founder and President of Ocean Alliance in collaboration with his wife, well known actress Lisa Harrow.  The lecture/performance piece, "SEACHANGE: Reversing the Tide" is  one of the events tied to a special exhibition titled "Art of the Sea and Science" which Ocean Alliance and the North Shore Arts Association have launched in and  examination of the issues facing the marine environment and a celebration of the mystery and beauty of the ocean.  A $5.00 donation is encouraged.

"Paint Factory" slate by Sharon Bahosh
A very unique component of the "Art Exhibition of the Sea and Science" is the show and silent auction of works by NSAA artists painted on original roofing slates removed from the historic Paint Factory building. These historic slates were donated to NSAA by non-profit Ocean Alliance and they provide the substrate used by Artist Members to create original works, each approximately 12" x 24" depicting a wide range of images inspired by Gloucester, the sea, and its inhabitants. Bids for the silent auction may be place June 17 through July 30 by visiting or contacting NSAA. One hundred per cent of the silent auction proceeds will go to fund the ongoing restoration the NSAA's gallery building and Ocean Alliance's Paint Factory headquarters. Click here:  http://nsarts.org/2016_Slate_Auction.html to see all of the slates available for bid from now until July 30th at 5pm. Visit or  call the gallery to place your bid!  978-283-1857.

About the Lecturers and Performers
Dr. Roger Payne, Ocean Alliance President and Founder

Dr. Roger Payne states, "I am so disappointed that the Arts and Sciences are taught separately-both the Art and the Sciences lose. They should be co-mingled." Ocean scientist Payne embodies the best of the Arts and Sciences functioning together to do something probably neither could have done separately.
Ocean Alliance CEO Ian Kerr share, "Because Dr. Payne is a musician..because he is an artist/scientist, his training allowed him to identify, and make the most profound discovery about humpback whales. That whales sing songs!" Prior to his discovery in 1967, along with Scott McVay, whale sounds were a mystery. Payne knew, however, that "a song is a rhythmically repeated collection of notes" and was able, because of his music training, to identify the particular songs of individual whales that he later confirmed can be heard over thousands of miles of ocean.
Having worked aboard the sloop "Clearwater" in support of Pete Seeger's efforts to clean up the Hudson River in New York, Payne is considered a pioneer in his field. In the hope of sharing the work of artists/scientists, recordings of whale songs were place aboard American Satellites Voyager I and II. Drs. Payne and Kerr have also stimulated interest in conserving our oceans and marine life by testifying before Congress and presenting before the United Nations.
Lisa Harrow, actress, author, and environmental activist
Lisa was born in Auckland, New Zealand and is a noted actress well known in the UK for her roles in British theatre, films and television. Her career started at the Royal Shakespeare Company. She has performed on stage all across America, and has appeared in major television and film roles in the US. One role for which she is well known in this country is that of Nancy Astor, the first woman to take her seat in the House of Commons. That BBC drama, Nancy Astor, aired in the US 1982 on PBS' Masterpiece Theatre.
Lisa Harrow is the author of the environmental handbook "What Can I Do?" published in separate editions for Australia, New Zealand, the UK, and the United States.

About SEACHANGE: Reversing the Tide (performed by Dr. Roger Payne and his wife noted British actress Lisa Harrow
What is the most consequential contribution of science in the past 100 years? Is is E=mc2, the structure of DNA, decoding the human genome, plate tectonics, the computer revolution, putting a man on the moon, the development of nuclear weapons? None of those directly affects the lives of every human being on earth-most indigenous peoples are simply unaware of all of them. However, respect for the hundreds of species that make the world habitable for us, and with which we interdepend is utterly consequential. Indigenous people were first to guess at it but scientific discovery during the past 50 years has proved it. And the consequence of that discovery is-if we ignore the destruction of the wild world until it can no longer keep the world habitable, our species will not survive.
The evidence for and the consequences of this broad claim are explored in SEACHANGE: Reversing the Tide. In this hour long presentation Roger Payne and his wife, actress Lisa Harrow combine the knowledge of science with the wisdom of poetry to argue compellingly that man is not the overseer of Life on earth but an integral part of Life's complex web and conclude that the most consequential scientific discovery of the past 100 years is the realization that our species' survival requires that we attend not just to our own well being but to the well being of the entire web of Life-nothing else we can ever do will be nearly as consequential as understanding that point. The audience emerges with a clear understanding of humanity's role in the natural world and of the urgency of our need to start living sustainably.
Since 2004, Roger and Lisa have presented this program to audiences in universities, film festivals, schools, churches, conferences, libraries and other public spaces; off-Broadway, the UN, and in people's living rooms, throughout the US, as well as in New Zealand and the UK.
Currently, a team of New Zealand/Canadian documentary makers are raising the funds from international sources to make a film of the piece, which they are calling Pale Blue Dot after Carl Sagan's book, and extract from which are the last words of SEACHANGE.

"SEACHANGE moves its viewers. The strength of its ecological convictions derive from well-marshalled facts of the reality of our despoilment of the planet, and the emotional impact of the poetry the piece uses. Most importantly, Harrow and Payne turn away from despair to what is to be done."
-Roald Hoffman
Nobel Laureate, chemist and writer

"Thank you, both of you, for that haunting and lovely stage piece. You had me thrumming all the way home."
-Lawrence Wechsler
Director of the New York Institute for the Humanities at NYU


Also on display in the galleries of the North Shore Arts Association is the Artist Members Exhibition II  "Art of the Sea and Science", and the New Artist Members Show. Both exhibitions are on display at our harborside galleries from June 17 through July 30th  and are free and open to the public.

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Join NSAA for "Art Exhibition of the Seas and Science" & Dr. Ian Kerr of Ocean Alliance "Why Whales?" Lecture Sunday, June 26, 12:30- 4:00!

"Genesis", David Kapetanopoulos
This Sunday, June 26 at 12:30 to 1:30 p.m., CEO Dr. Ian Kerr of Ocean Alliance presents the first lecture "Why Whales?" in a series of thought provoking lectures and performances that will be presented this season at the North Shore Arts Association. The lectures, presented by Dr. Ian Kerr and Dr. Roger Payne of Ocean Alliance, and Karen Ristuben of Rocky Neck Art Colony will be the scientific component in a groundbreaking collaboration between Ocean Alliance, who's mission to protect and preserve our oceans and marine life will be allied with North Shore Arts Association and Rocky Neck Art Colony's missions of advancing the appreciation and support of the Arts. The first lecture, "Why Whales?' by CEO Dr. Ian Kerr of Ocean Alliance to be held this Sunday, June 26th, is free and open to the public and will be followed by a reception from 2 to 4 p.m., with the artists and scientists from all three non-profits on hand to meet, answer questions, and mingle with members of the community. A donation of $5. is suggested for entrance to both events.

The North Shore Arts Association's "Art Exhibition of the Sea and Science" is currently on display throughout the NSAA galleries. Although the exhibition includes painting, prints and sculpture of all genres and media, the exhibition has a special emphasis on man's relationship with the sea, and seeks to celebrate the ocean's vast beauty and to illuminate the progress being made and the  challenges remaining as we examine the health of the earth's oceans.

A very unique component of the "Art Exhibition of the Sea and Science" will be a show and silent auction of works by NSAA artists painted on original roofing slates removed from the historic Paint Factory building. These historic slates were donated to NSAA by non-profit Ocean Alliance and they provide the substrate used by Artist Members to create original works, each approximately 12" x 24" depicting a wide range of images inspired by Gloucester, the sea, and its inhabitants. Bids for the silent auction may be place June 17 through July 30 by visiting or contacting NSAA. One hundred per cent of the silent auction proceeds will go to fund the ongoing restoration the NSAA's gallery building and Ocean Alliance's Paint Factory headquarters. Click here:  http://nsarts.org/2016_Slate_Auction.html to see all of the slates available for bid from now until July 30th at 5pm. Visit or  call the gallery to place your bid!  978-283-1857

A short introduction to lecturer, Dr. Ian Kerr, CEO Ocean Alliance:"I think of our planet as Planet Ocean, not Planet Earth because almost three quarters of the planet is ocean." A self described adventurer who loves ocean science, Kerr was granted a Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the University of Southern Maine in honor of his 20 years of ocean research in over 21 countries.
On a trip out of Gloucester harbor in 1993 on a whale watch boat he saw the Paint Factory. Recognizing that such an iconic building, with its long maritime history, might capture the hearts and minds of people thereby stimulating their interest and involvement in ocean and whale conservation, he realized it would be a valuable place to headquarter Ocean Alliance. As a result, the organization contact the Annenberg Foundation which ultimately provided all the funds necessary to purchase the Paint Factory. Kerr emphasizes that, since the building is mortgage free, all donations go to the ongoing restoration of the Paint Factory buildings.
The OA organization is a pioneer in developing benign research tools for studying our oceans, the most recent iteration being drones-which they have dubbed "Snotbots"-which gather specimens from the spray spouted through the blow holes of whales. Award winning actor Patrick Stewart has long been a friend to Ocean Alliance and was instrumental in garnering funds for the "Snotbot" research program. This research method is hailed for its non-invasive approach to studying the health of whale populations.
When asked what is meant by "Alliance" in the OA title, Kerr said it "reflects the idea that, along with collaboration from many other scientific organizations, all of humanity needs to allied to preserve our oceans."
Finding Gloucester reminiscent of the small fishing village in South West England where he grew up, Dr. Kerr and his wife chose to make their home in East Gloucester.





Thursday, June 2, 2016

Groundbreaking Collaboration by NSAA, Ocean Alliance, and Rocky Neck Art Colony "Art Exhibition of the Sea and Science" June 17-July 30

Ocean Alliance research vessel "Odyssey"
American writer, artist and philosopher E. Hubbard said " Art is not a thing, it is a way." The historic North Shore Arts Association of Gloucester, celebrating its 94th year, reflects this philosophy with its "Art in Action-Connecting Communities" focus this season, by hosting a groundbreaking collaboration with Gloucester's marine conservation/research group Ocean Alliance, now headquartered in Gloucester's iconic Paint Factory, and historic Rocky Neck Art Colony.
Supporting the Ocean Alliance mission to protect and preserve our oceans and marine life and North Shore Arts Association and Rocky Neck Art Colony's mission of supporting the arts, an "Art Exhibition of the Sea And Science" will be on display June 17 through July 30 in the galleries of NSAA.
Although works of all genres will be on display, the main focus will be works depicting the sea and Cape Ann. A very unique component of the exhibition will be a show and silent auction of works painted on old roofing slates removed from the historic Paint Factory building. These historic slates donated to NSAA by non profit Ocean Alliance provide the substrate used by NSAA Artist Members to create original paintings, each approximately 12' x 24" depicting a myriad images. Bids for the silent auction may be placed June 17 through July 30 by visiting or contacting NSAA. One hundred percent of silent auction proceeds will go to fund the ongoing restoration of the NSAA's gallery building and Ocean Alliance's Paint Factory headquarters.
"Underwater Whales", Donald Doyle
The collaboration also offers an extraordinary series of Ocean Alliance and Rocky Neck Art Colony lectures and performances. This special programming was made possible through partial funding by the Massachusetts Cultural Council. The first of the series will be marine conservation/research group Ocean Alliance presenting a lecture "Why Whales?" by CEO Dr. Ian Kerr on Sunday, June 26th, 12:30-1:30 p.m. followed by a reception, open free to the public 2-4 p.m. A dynamic performance/poetry reading, "Sea Change: Reversing the Tide" will be presented by President of Ocean Alliance Dr. Roger Payne - whose profound discovery of whale songs has been a major force in their protection - and his wife, noted British actress Lisa Harrow on Thursday, July 7th at 7 p.m. Rocky Neck Art Colony President and arts and marine conservation advocate Karen Ristuben will present a lecture "Intersection of Marine Science, Conservation, Activism and Art" on Saturday, July 23rd at 3 p.m. All lectures and performances are free with a suggested donation of $5.
To learn more about these three iconic  non-profits visit  www.nsarts.org, www.whale.org, www.rockyneckartcolony.org

NSAA EVENTS SUMMARY:


June 17 through July 30 NSAA "Art of the Sea and Science" Exhibition

June 17 through July 30 Original artwork on Paint Factory slates Silent Auction

June 26 (12:30 - 1:30 p.m.) "Why Whales?" lecture with Dr. Ian Kerr

June 26 (2:00 - 4:00 p.m.) Reception open free to the general public

July 7 (7:00 p.m.) "Sea Change-Reversing the Tide" performance with Dr. Roger Payne and Lisa Harrow, noted British actress

July 23 (3:00 p.m.) "The Intersection of Marine Science, Conservation, Activism and Art" lecture with Karen Ristuben

-Susan Britt, NSAA staff writer

"Single Whale", photo courtesy of Ocean Alliance