RICHELLE GRIBBLE is a multidisciplinary artist exploring planetary connectivity. Her work explores networks and systems-based investigations to reflect the ways human impact, technology, and environment collide. She has had solo shows in Los Angeles, New York, Japan, and international orbit around Earth etched on satellites and aboard rockets. She has exhibited at renowned art fairs including Art Market San Francisco, Texas Contemporary, and Miami Project and had her artwork illuminated on a LED screen in Times Square NYC.
Gribble has completed 17 art residencies as part of her project The Nomadic Artist, where she travels the world to reflect social and environmental changes across the globe and off-planet. Awarded residencies include Planet Labs, Biosphere 2, The Arctic Circle Residency, Awagami Factory and many more. Work presented in a TEDxTrousdale talk “What is our Role within a Networked Society?” and published in The Creator’s Project, The Atlantic, Artillery, Hyperallergic and VICE.
She is the Founding Director of SUPERCOLLIDER, an art + sci + tech exhibition platform and satellite initiative and co-founder of Beyond Earth, an artist collective exploring frontiers of art and space. She is a Scholar for the Kepler Space Institute examining the arts and humanities in space and is a Planet Ambassador at Planet Labs, an Earth-imaging satellite company devoted to use space to help life on Earth.
Find Richelle on Twitter at @richellegribble
View her artwork at richellegribble.com
“With every stage in my life, I’ve been shifting my perspective.” -Richelle Gribble on Casual Space Podcast
About what Richelle is looking to achieve while on her “Mars” simulation: “I’m really prioritizing creative research while I am on this mission…I’m here at the habitat because of this interested in exploring art at it’s intersection with space. I have this desire to (eventually) become an art astronaut. I know that at some point, there will be an artist in space, so getting that proper training, doing that analog experience, and preparing mentally and physically to be able to make that adventure and be able to reflect that experience of spaceflight, or even just that process of getting there as reflected in the artwork is going to be an important part of our story as humans.”
“Having artists go to space, having artists go to Mars… we’re inherently extremely resourceful! I think that’s one of artist’s biggest strengths. When you give us restrictions, we get really creative.”
“We’re here in a small enclosure. But if you are making art, experiencing art, you travel everywhere, you can go anywhere. When you’re stuck inside a white dome, you turn on a song and you can go beyond. I think that’s going to be so important for these longer duration space flights.”