Biography

Ecological Artist

Pioneering ecological artist Aviva Rahmani has worked at the cutting edge of the avant-garde since she committed to her career in art at the age of nineteen. She has devoted many years of her working life to teaching, inspiring, and leading others through her art to a renewed focus on ecological restoration as artmaking. Rahmani is at the forefront of her field in ecological art and exhibits, publishes, and presents internationally. She currently lives and works in Manhattan and Maine and has recently completed a residency with the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council on Governors Island, New York.

Recognition

Aviva’s work has won numerous grants and fellowships and been written about internationally. She is an affiliate with the Institute for Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado at Boulder, gained her PhD from the University of Plymouth, UK, and received her BFA and MFA at the California Institute of the Arts.

“Aviva Rahmani is a transdisciplinary ecoartist, whose range of output from 1960s-1970s performance art to her continental-scaled ecoart projects is indeed legendary, and ever progressing.”

— Dr Robert Shane, Art Historian and Critic

 
 
 
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50 Years of Work

The book 50 Years of Work by Aviva Rahmani showcases her performances, installations, exhibitions, and public art on the environment.

 
 
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The Blued Trees Symphony

The Blued Trees Symphony project legally challenges expanding fossil fuel infrastructures with copyrighted and sonified installations across miles of North America.

Photograph by Joel Greenberg.

Early Life

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Image: cropped photo of Aviva Rahmani by Fred Lonidier at the wedding of Pauline Oliveros and Linda Montano in San Diego, 1970

Childhood: Family and Environmental Injustice

Ethical ideals and an affinity for the natural world have driven my practice as an ecological artist since childhood. I grew up as a first generation American. My parents and older sister were war refugees. Their experiences sensitized me to environmental injustice and made me responsive to philosophies held by indigenous peoples around the world about how to survive ecocide. My father’s career as an international land developer inspired my lifelong determination to undo the impacts of habitat fragmentation and destruction.

Teenage Years: Different Landscapes and Cultures

My family traveled throughout my teen years, exposing me to many landscapes and cultures. Those early travels fostered a deep interest in me about how history inflects understanding and allowed me to consider how genocide and ecocide merge. As I matured, I came to understand the implications of how the personal is political and manifests in art.

Influences

Early Influences

The first artists I was aware of were men. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s much critiqued The Song of Hiawatha was my first and most enduring introduction to indigenous wisdom as a young child. Despite the deconstruction of romance and racism in his work, his poem conveyed the compelling rhythms of native peoples’ relationships to nature. The lyrics filled my mind with how humans might coexist with other species. My family and my education exposed me to a wide range of ideas about religion, aesthetic forms, and politics. But, like many young artists, it was Leonardo D Vinci’s sketchbooks that fascinated me the most as early examples of how transdisciplinary observations could culminate in new knowledge and effect policy.

Choreography and Street Theatre

By the time I was ready to launch my career as a mature artist, I was influenced primarily by works that bridged art and life by a variety of artists. Fluxus artist Yoko Ono, John Cage, the collaborative works of Robert Rauschenberg, Peter Schumann and Allan Kaprow, and dancers from Martha Graham to Yvonne Rainer were the greatest influences on me then. They taught me to imagine choreographing space with my street theatre group, the American Ritual Theatre (1969-71).

Image: Joe Gaffney. Performance of “Floating Worlds,” at Espace DBD in Los Angeles, 1982.

Image: Joe Gaffney. Performance of “Floating Worlds,” at Espace DBD in Los Angeles, 1982.

Feminism and Ecoart

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Image ‘Two Nice Jewish Girls’ detail from one-day installation. Marni Farrell and Aviva Rahmani are seated in front of a large amount of memorabilia. Photograph by Anthony Ramos, 1972.

In the seventies I became aware of other artists who were feminists and, increasingly, other women who identified as ecoartists. My contemporary colleagues, from Betsy Damon to Mary Mattingly, are participants in the international ecoart Listserv invitational community I cofounded in 1999. They now represent a vibrant circle of mutual influence.

Education

  • University of Plymouth, UK Doctorate in Trigger Point Theory as Aesthetic Activism, 2010 – 2015

  • Lehman College, CUNY, NYC Certificate in Geographic Information Systems 2011-3 (resumed 2018)

  • Juilliard School of Music, NYC NY 2018

  • California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, CA, MFA Multi-media and Electronic Music, 1972 - 1974

  • California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, CA, BFA Multi-media and Electronic Music, 1971- 1972 teaching assistant to Allan Kaprow and Mort Sobotnick

  • The Cooper Union School of Art & Architecture, New York City, NY 1964-1967


You can download a compressed version of Rahmani’s dissertation

Trigger Point Theory as Aesthetic Activism