From River to Ocean:
Artists Respond to Environmental Impacts
Hughen/Starkweather
Website - https://www.hughenstarkweather.com/
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/hughen_starkweather/
Hughen/Starkweather is the collaboration of artists Jennifer Starkweather and Amanda Hughen, who have worked as a team for almost 20 years. Together they create research-based, abstract artworks about specific topics or locations. For the past several years Hughen/Starkweather have researched the impacts of climate disruption on places where water meets land, exploring engineered, human-made structures that are increasingly, inextricably interwoven with natural systems in the landscape, and how these systems might fail or succeed together.
Hughen/Starkweather exhibitions include the Asian Art Museum (SF), the Public Policy Institute of California (SF), University of San Francisco, and the Contemporary Jewish Museum (SF). Recent large-scale works include a commission by SFMOMA for a public work at the Chase Center and a commission to create a permanent public artwork embedded in the glass exterior and roof deck of the Union Square Central Subway Station, both in downtown San Francisco. Hughen received an MFA from UC Berkeley and has been an artist-in-residence at the DeYoung Museum of Art (CA), the Headlands Center for the Arts (CA), Oxbow (CA), and Yaddo (NY). Starkweather received an MFA from Tyler School of Art (PA) and has been an artist-in-residence at Ucross (WY), Skowhegan (ME), Oxbow (CA), and Ragdale (IL). Hughen/Starkweather is the recipient of a 2020 San Francisco Arts Commission Individual Artist Grant.
Hughen/Starkweather creates artworks that investigate engineered infrastructures that control or deliver water—including dams, pipes, seawalls, levees, and floodgates—and how they are interwoven into landscapes. With increasing climate extremes, how will these interconnected engineered and natural systems respond, adapt, or fail under unprecedented stressors.
Water is central to their work, and research fuels their process. Conversations with community members—from farmers and poets to hydrologists and historians—lead to further investigation, including maps, news articles, and site visits. With the gathered information, the artists create complex visual forms closely tied to the source materials. The resulting artworks blend abstract and recognizable images including landforms, maps, and engineered systems. Rather than offering solutions, Hughen/Starkweather aims to reflect the ambiguities of the climate crisis, inviting viewers to engage with its complexities from new perspectives.
Their sculptural works in the exhibition allude to past and future impacts of fires and ash on fresh water systems in the landscape. References include the teeth of beavers, whose dams not only deter fires by keeping the ground saturated, but also function as filters for ash and other fire-produced pollutants that enter rivers and streams after a wildfire; conical drill bits that bore deep into the earth to access fresh water aquifers; glass versions of tools used for centuries by water dowsers to find underground water sources; and water as the new gold rush in the American West.
167 miles/Aqueduct, 2021
Ink and graphite on wood panel
20”x 16”
POR
Narrow Defile/Aqueduct, 2021
Ink and graphite on wood panel
11” x 14”
POR
Nine Out of Every Ten Drops (Pipe Dreams), 2022
Ink, acrylic paint, pencil, gouache on paper
36” x 28” / framed
POR
Seize of the Snowmelt (Pipe Dreams), 2023
Ink, gouache, and salt on wood
30” x 80”/diptych
POR
Superstition and Story (Pipe Dreams), 2023
Ink, gouache, and graphite on wood panel
40” x 60” /diptych
POR
Smoke Scattered Light (Pipe Dreams), 2024
Ink, graphite, gouache, river water, salt, dust, sand, and borax on paper
44” x 44”
POR
Cleaving a Willow in a Single Bite: 2024
Ceramic, gold leaf, salt, and ink
Dimensions variable
POR
Ash-Laced Flood Waters, 2024
Glass, ceramic, gold leaf, salt, and ink
Dimensions variable
POR
Searching for Fire Refugia, 2024
Glass, stone, gold leaf, salt, and ink
Dimensions variable
POR