
Come into View
A solo exhibition by Kristen Neville Taylor
Images below are courtesy of Constance Mensh



Come into View, a site-specific, multimedia installation by Kristen Neville Taylor,
is on exhibit in our School House until November 2, 2025.
Since the Paleozoic era, horseshoe crabs have synchronized breeding with the lunar cycle each spring, climbing ashore when the tide is high, the moon is full, and the water is warm to mate and lay their eggs in the sand. Phenology, or the study of the timing of cyclical natural events with the seasons, was once a predictable field that is now increasingly less so in accordance with climate shifts. Before the invention of industrialized time and its prevalence, humans also organized their lives by the seasons, following the rotation of the sun and moon, and according to cycles of birth, life, and death. Today, seas are rising in New Jersey two times faster than on average, yet our bodies and minds are slow to catch up with the shifting tide.
The installation incorporates materials and stories collected from field visits to the Delaware Bay made possible by a web of conservationists, scientists, and volunteers that have been quietly laying the groundwork for an alternative value system in Southern New Jersey. Through a video portrait, glass breath forms, and text, the exhibition explores the ways that horseshoe crabs model collective resilience and other ways of being in time.



This project was made possible by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Community-Based Art Grant Program. This project is funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Department of Environmental Protection – in partnership with the New Jersey State Council on the Arts. Enhancement Program.


