Drawing inspiration from
18th-century collectors, Elisabeth Pellathy's latest work explores themes of
conservation and preservation. Recently showcased at the ONCA Gallery in
Brighton, Visualised Bird Song explores an innovative method
of preserving sounds disappearing from our natural world. Matt Iredale caught
up with Elisabeth Pellathy to talk translation.
![]() |
Visualized Bird Song 3D Print |
Cahaba River Watershed Project
A look at the natural environment and human activity.
A look at the natural environment and human activity.
March 26 - April 1st
Panel
Talk with Artists - March 30th 5:00 - Holmes Auditorium
The Cahaba
River Watershed Project is the collaborative project of printmaker Scott
Stephens, new media artist Elisabeth Pellathy, and sculptor Lee Somers. Their
week-long residency will explore the use of the laser cutter as an integral
part of relief and intaglio print processes.
The Cahaba River Watershed Project is an
investigation of the natural environment and how it has shaped and is shaped by
human activity. The Cahaba River is a 200-mile free owing river in Alabama with
some of the greatest biodiversity and scenic beauty in the South. It rises near
Birmingham and flows southwest to the Alabama River just south of Selma. As it
passes through Montevallo’s Shelby County it is fed by the Little Cahaba
watershed that rises in Ebenezer Swamp, an ecological preserve and research
center of the University of Montevallo.
The three themes of interest around the
Cahaba River are the natural environment, the human history, from Civil War to
Civil Rights, and its ecological and geological features, containing natural
resources that are used for economic activity, especially the coal, limestone
and iron ore mining that was the foundation of the early iron industry in the
area.