Hosts of the event and members of the panel gather on Thursday, April 5, 2018 in Eynon Ballroom. -Photo Editor/Nicole Mingo

On Thursday, April 5, Rowan University students and staff were invited into the Chamberlain Student Center’s reception hall, where experts in both science and communication sat on a panel for Art and Science Perspectives on Climate Change. Hosted in partnership with the School of Earth and Environment and Rowan University Art Gallery, the event allowed keynote speaker Diane Burko (artist of “Vast and Vanishing,” the university art gallery’s most current installation) a moment to express the importance of using art to bridge the gap between science and emotion.

“What I’ve been able to do the last decade or so is take the information that I get from scientists and translate it and then communicate it,” Burko said, who began her career as a landscape painter. She first became interested in climate change in 2006 following her coincidental participation in an exhibition of Icelandic volcanoes.

“Climate change was in the air,” Burko said. “And as an artist who loves the landscape, I decided I had to do something about it.”

Thus began her career relationship with geologists and other climate scientists, using common geological research methods such as repeat photography and recessional lines. Since then, she has been named an affiliate of The Institute of Alpine and Arctic Research, and been invited to speak at the Arctic Circle Assembly Conference in Reykjavik, Iceland. She has also engaged in the Scientists’ March on Washington, and identifies as a “subversive” on the topic of environmentalism.

Among those who know the realities and science of climate change best is Dr. Luke Trusel, an assistant professor of geology at Rowan whose current research is funded by NASA. Trusel participated in a panel discussion following Burko’s keynote.

“Scientists, we think in numbers, and data, and facts, and that’s not always the best way to communicate so I think having artwork to help communicate the research results is critical,” Trusel said. “I would also say that we scientists have to do a better job, too, at appealing to people and their emotions and how environmental change affects people’s lives. We sometimes get so tied up in the numbers that we can miss the implications for everybody.”

Perhaps the plight of climate education – and miseducation – in America was best summarized by panelist Dr. Kate Marvel, a research scientist at Columbia and the Goddard Institute of Space Studies.

Dr. Kate Marvel discusses climate change on Thursday, April 5, 2018 in the Eynon Ballroom. -Photo Editor/Nicole Mingo

“I do a lot of talking to the public about climate change because I’m a masochist – I like to be yelled at,” Marvel said. “Something that I’ve come to understand is that it’s not about facts. As scientists, we think that if we give people some more facts, that’ll change their minds, and there’s actually science that says that facts almost never change anybody’s mind. That can be really frustrating.”

Marvel ended her talk by raising questions about the best way to relay climate change to a wider audience, suggesting a combination of science, art and writing. 

Diane Burko’s work is currently available for viewing at the Rowan University Art Gallery.

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