New England Diary

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Wave action at Rough Point

The Rough Point mansion from Newport’s Cliff Walk.

 From Robert Whitcomb’s “Digital Diary,’’ in GoLocal24.com

It’s nice when artists and others use New England’s innumerable beautiful outdoor spaces for exhibitions.

Thus it is with artist Melissa McGill’s coming show  “In the Waves’’ at Newport’s Rough Point (which we used to call Rough Trade), the estate of late and deeply eccentric, indeed creepy (but philanthropic!) billionairess Doris Duke.

Ms. McGill has put out a call for young people to participate in the show, set for next month and meant to focus attention on global warming-caused sea-level rise and other man-caused environmental issues. Dodie Kazanjian, the founder of Art & Newport, is the curator of the exhibition.

This spectacle involves Ms. McGill painting waves on fabric made out of recycled plastic pulled from the ocean; plastic pollution has become a huge menace to sea life. The young people participating in the spectacle will use handles at the ends of long fabric strips to  create motion to mimic that of waves.=

“I’m painting the waves in a very expressive way, with the different colors that reference the ocean at Rough Point,” Ms. McGill told the Newport Daily News’s Sean Flynn, in a fun article. “I have done studies and research so they really evoke the ocean there.” (Does the ocean at Rough Point really look that much different than the ocean anywhere?)=

For more information, please hit this link. 

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Coastal flooding in Marblehead, Mass., during Superstorm Sandy on Oct. 29, 2012

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As the seas rise, more and more people will have to move back from the shore and abandon their homes on land that’s increasingly vulnerable to flooding. That land will be left as a  buffer to mitigate damage from storms. How much of it can be turned into public open space,  as parks, bringing something good from the situation?

By the way, although it was published back in 1999, Cornelia Dean’s prescient book Against the Tide: The Battle for America’s Beaches, remains a dramatic, prescriptive (and often alarming) guide to  the issues around rising seas and coastal development. Ms. Dean, the former New York Times science editor, continues to study the not-very-slow-motion coastal crisis.