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August 5, 2025
From South Pole to North Pole is an ongoing exhibition that delves into a fascinating art journey to the extremes of the earth, namely Svalbard and Antarctica, as it is related through the experiences of the artists themselves who have lived through it and created art from it.
This is part of the Taiwanese American Art Council’s (TAAC) Eco Art on Island, a series of exhibitions in which artists, curators, medical professionals, and environmental experts respond to island and terrestrial ecologies. The exhibitions will be running through early November in House 17 on Governors Island and is free to the public.
Eco Art on Island, in association with Tenri Culture Institute, invites artists to observe, experience, and respond to island ecologies through cross-disciplinary creative practice, recognizing that no one is external to the social, cultural, and ecological systems shaping today’s climate crisis.
Recently I met with artists Marisa De Las Nieves Delgado and Jia-Jen Lin for interesting conversations about their exhibitions.
Marisa De Las Nieves Delgado How Antarctica Chose Her
MARISA DE LAS NIEVES DELGADO, the first woman born in Antarctica shows where she was born on Esperanza base. Photo by Kaju Roberto.
In Antarctica, there are no worlds to divide us, as it is covered by the Antarctica Treaty, an agreement shared between all participating countries which states that this land will only be used for scientific research and exploration.
Throughout history, only been 11 people have been born on the Antarctica continent, the coldest and most inhospitable place on earth. In 1978, Marisa became the first female to born on the Argentine military base of Esperanza where her father was stationed as a scientific team assistant on the Antarctica peninsula. It was his third station to Antarctica, and one where Marisa’s mother reluctantly agreed to accompany him.
Today Marisa travels the world and speaks about how being born at the bottom of the earth has shaped her life philosophy and her relationship to fragile ecosystems. Even in a seemingly uninhabitable and harsh place, life finds a way to flourish.
Facilities in Antarctica Marisa told me that in 1978, there was only one building on base which served as a medical facility staffed by one doctor. In 1979, a fire destroyed that building. It has since been rebuilt, and there are now several medical facilities with doctors and nurses, a church, a post office, a museum, a school, and even a radio station in Esperanza, which is the only operating radio station on the entire continent.
Antarctica as Art Marisa explained the relationship between art and Antarctica as the search for truth in silence. Art is a place where we are forced to confront ourselves. Antarctica is like standing in front of a blank canvas, where we confront the infinite — just as when we are standing at the edge of the world in front of the ever-expansive polar landscape. Both challenge us to find beauty where others see emptiness. To find connection where others see isolation — just as the severe winter Antarctica storms sculpt ice into ever-changing forms.
Marisa has expressed that her life has been a bridge between these two worlds – the silence of ice and the voice of art. Through her work, she tries to bring the invisible stories of Antarctica to life.
Preserving the Heartbeat of Antarctica Together with the ten other Antarctica-born people, Marisa created and is the president/founder of the organization Native Antarcticans. Their mission is five-fold:
- To protect the symbolic power of Antarctica as a beacon of peace - To remind the world that people have lived and loved in desolate beauty -To inspire new generations that Antarctica is a vital part of our shared story, a place that exemplifies when nations choose cooperation over conflict -To show that in Antarctica the impossible is possible, through education, culture projects, art exhibitions, and environmental initiatives -To show a place with no borders can unite a world divided To stand for the preservation of the continent’s natural purity, and that a fragile earth must be cared with the same tenderness that brought life to this distant frozen placeAntarctica is The Heartbeat of our Planet Antarctica has been ravaged by climate change in recent decades like many other places in the world, particularly at the northern and southern extremes of the world. Marisa wants the world to know that Antarctica is the heartbeat of our planet, with its glaciers holding the majority of earth’s fresh water. Its cold currents regulate the oceans. Its storms shape the weather patterns of the earth. When Antarctica suffers, the whole world does.To follow the work Marisa De Las Nieves Delgado: Facebook: Native_Antarcticans, Instagram: @native_antarticans, Website: taac-us.org
Jia-Jen Lin Interdisciplinary Artist
JIA-JEN LIN, interdisciplinary artist displays her works inspired by Svalbard. Photo by Kaju Roberto.
To view Jia-Jin’s work, visit Governors Island House 17. Website: taac-us.org Kaju Roberto is an accomplished musician, singer/ songwriter, journalist, and an award-winning producer. He is the artist Rad Jet on Spotify