Deep Futures: Sites of Toxic Land Use by Amanda Leigh Evans | UCF Art Gallery
Explore Deep Futures: Sites of Toxic Land Use by Amanda Leigh Evans at the [UCF Art Gallery](https://cah.ucf.edu/gallery/) from Jan. 15 - Feb. 13. The gallery is open Mon. - Fri., 10am - 5pm, and all exhibits are free and open to the public.Exhibition Statement:Since 2018, Amanda Leigh Evans has been collecting raw materials (photos, rocks, soils, pressings, and archival images) from Superfund sites she visits throughout the United States. A Superfund site is designated by the United States Environmental Protection Agency as a polluted location that requires long-term cleanup of hazardous material contamination, and their collection is made with the utmost caution.Approximately 78 million people (roughly 24% of the U.S. population) live within 3 miles of a Superfund site, yet many are unaware of the dangers these sites pose. Invisible threats to human and ecological health are often not visually apparent when walking or driving past these sites. To live in the 21st Century is to reckon with our proximity and complicity with the ongoing creation of these sites.Evan's exhibition features ceramic sculpture, collected raw materials, large-format collage images, and research materials from several Superfund sites she has visited over the years. The project began when the artist discovered that her maternal family, which has chronic and neurological health issues, was raised on the Bunker Hill Mine Superfund Site in Northern Idaho, one of the nation's largest and most complex Superfund sites in the United States.To learn more about this exhibition, click [HERE.](https://cah.ucf.edu/gallery/exhibit/deep-futures-sites-of-toxic-land-use-by-amanda-leigh-evans/)