A barn facing Road 102 between Davis and Woodland will soon carry a colorful message for climate action. Community members of all ages and experience levels are encouraged to come out Saturday, , grab a paintbrush and become muralists for a day to help create it.
The event is the culmination of a mural design competition, the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Climate Raising Challenge, launched by the and the to inspire climate activism in the Sacramento Valley.
The winning painting, 鈥淗ungry for Connection,鈥 was created by Rachael Dal Porto, a civil and environmental engineering Ph.D. student at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis. The mural travels along the Sacramento Valley, weaving together imagery of climate-resilient crops, wildlife, floodplains and restored wetlands, and bridging connections among food, clean transportation, community resiliency and local action.
We talked with Dal Porto about public art, climate change, science and how all those things can intersect to become tools for climate action.
Q&A with the artist
What inspired your painting?
The painting was inspired by the landscape of the Sacramento Valley, following the Sacramento River from Mount Shasta to downtown Sacramento. I thought about the beauty of the landscape and our community. I also took into consideration the findings from .
You study engineering. Do your studies inspire your art, and if so, how?
Sure! As an environmental engineer, my work and studies are completely centered around climate change and the environment. Seeing the state of research as it stands certainly inspires the urgency I feel, which prompted the design. In this particular design, the mural includes aspects directly from the assessment I mentioned earlier, which I pieced through for my studies.
What role do you think public murals and art can play in addressing climate change?
I think art in all forms is a means to express ideas and emotions. In the context of climate change, there are many artists who use imagery to convey information, as well as to incite emotion in those who experience the art. It is used to inspire change and to envision both the positive view of the world we could live in if we adequately address climate change, as well as the negative view of what world we would 鈥 and are already starting to 鈥 live in if we continue with business as usual.
How do you hope people will respond to your art?
I hope it will elicit positivity in the sense of imagining the future we could have if we take appropriate climate action now. The Sacramento Valley has such a beautiful pre-colonial landscape, and it provides fresh and nutrient-rich sustenance to much of the country. Using the natural landscape for agriculture and recreation, rather than sprawled development, would be one piece to the climate puzzle with multitudes of benefits.
What excites you most about this project?
I think it鈥檚 super neat that it鈥檚 totally local. From the location to the organizers, the donors, the muralist 鈥 everyone involved is in the area and has connections to the community.
Communities are often the true drivers of environmental justice and climate change policy and action, so community-led events like these are really awesome. I'm also excited to see if this will progress to more murals done in the future.
Anything else you鈥檇 like to add?
Thank you to the donors and hard-working organizers who made this event possible, and to our local farmers who grow, harvest and distribute our food!
Learn more about the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Climate Raising Challenge at and register to join the community mural event via .
Media Resources
Kat Kerlin is an environmental science writer and media relations specialist at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis. She鈥檚 the editor of the 鈥What Can I Do About Climate Change?鈥 blog. kekerlin@ucdavis.edu.