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Pinellas County: Media
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 Left Brain and Right Brain view on Tampa Bay:
Artist and Scientist to discuss mangrove reforestation at lecture
 
What:
Mangroves and Eco-Art: A lecture by scientist Tom Smith, Ph.D. and artist Xavier Cortada
 
When:
Tuesday, November 18th, 2008 at 6:00 pm
 
Where:
Florida Botanical Gardens
Welcome Center
12520 Ulmerton Road
Largo, FL 33774
727-582-2100
http://www.flbg.org

Dr. Tom Smith will discuss "Mangroves of the World - Why They are Important?" and Xavier Cortada will discuss his a participatory eco-art projects aimed at restoring native habitats for plants and animals in coastal communities.  Both are working locally with students at Shorecrest Preparatory School on an eco-art project to reforest Tampa Bay.
 
Xavier Cortada "re-permanent" installation of mangrove seedlings at the Florida Botanical GardensPrior to the lecture, at 5:00 pm, Cortada will join Smith and the students in dedicating the mangrove installation he created at the Florida Botanical Gardens. The eco-art installation, commissioned by Pinellas County Art in Public Places, features hundreds of red mangrove seedlings in clear water-filled cups.  In September, Dr. Smith led the Shorecrest Preparatory School students in collecting the mangrove propagules from Weedon Island Nature Preserve.  Next year, students will plant this installation's seedlings on Tampa Bay and replace them with a new batch.
 
Dr. Tom Smith, a scientist based at the U.S. Geological Service in St. Petersburg, FL, is internationally recognized as an expert on coastal ecosystems in general and mangroves in particular.  He has worked in forests in Florida, the Virgin Islands, Belize, Australia, Papua New Guinea, and elsewhere throughout Asia and the Pacific.  His research is aimed at understanding disturbance, both natural and man-made, and recovery in these important forests and especially at how to restore them. 
 
Xavier Cortada's mangrove installation at Florida Botanical GardensXavier Cortada has worked with groups across the world to produce numerous large-scale collaborative art projects-- including eco-art installations on Miami Beach (2006), the South Pole (2007) and the North Pole (2008).  The Miami artist has been commissioned to create art for the White House, the World Bank, the Florida Supreme Court, Miami City Hall, Miami-Dade County Hall, the Miami Art Museum, and the Museum of Florida History. For more information visit www.cortada.com or www.reclamationproject.net.
WELCOME TO THE
ARCHIVED
RECLAMATION PROJECT WEBSITE:
 2004 - 2013


 
 
 
 

Xavier Cortada's participatory art practice is based at Florida International University.

FIU College of Architecture + The Arts


Xavier Cortada
FIU College of Architecture + The Arts
Miami Beach Urban Studios
420 Lincoln Road, Suite 440
Miami Beach, FL 33139
 
 
 

 Reclamation Project 


FLOR500

 

Native Flags


The Reclamation Project and Native Flags are participatory eco-art projects by FIU College of Architecture + The Arts Artist-in-Residence Xavier Cortada.  

In South Florida, they are presented in coordination with our project partners:



 
FIU Office of University Sustainabiity
MDC Earth Ethics Institute



Copyright 2006-2013 
Xavier Cortada