ACCELERATOR
Eben Haines
Tide House, 2023
Comprising a four-sided structure resembling the battered entryway of a typical three-family rental, Tide House was a site-specific installation temporarily on view along the Charlestown Waterfront at Menino Park. The detailed structure invited all to reflect on connections between Boston's housing instability and future climate-related flooding predicted for Boston’s coastal and other shores.
Painted in warm tones reflecting the passage of time, with images of house residents emerging behind peeling wallpapers and held above the ground by chains and a steel chassis, the structure appeared to float, with the literal instability of housing emphasized through subtle kinetic movement in the wind. Additionally, a thin layer of limewash, a nontoxic water-based paint that gave the piece a stone-like appearance when dry, turning translucent when wet, covered the entire structure. As this layer of lime slowly washed off due to prolonged weather exposure, figures and colors emerged as the piece shed its sterile monumental appearance and took on the textures and feelings of inhabited space.
Boston is built on filled-up tidal marsh and mudflats, with many safety hazards and negligent landlords. While in the past, this relatively unstable ground merely restricted our ability to build tall buildings, climate change has made these areas more and more vulnerable to periodic flooding.
A house provides more than protection; It displays the lives lived within its walls. In this piece, we can empathize with our neighbors being pushed out of their homes by monied interests, recognizing that everyone deserves more than basic shelter from the outside world.
LOCATION
Mayor Thomas M. Menino Park, 98 16th St, Boston, MA 02129
ACCELERATOR
Eben Haines
Eben Haines' (he | him) works investigate the life of objects, emphasizing the constructed nature of history. Through figures and objects pictured against cinematic backdrops or in otherworldly settings, his paintings and installations suggest the passage of time and volatility. Set within displaced domestic structures, recent works consider themes such as climate change and systemic housing insecurity before and during the pandemic, exploring the illusionistic systems of privilege our society employs to mete out human rights like shelter, food, and healthcare. Comets race across the skies of bucolic landscapes, dying candles float before Roman portrait busts who stand in for the corrupting force of unchecked power.
Haines was born in Boston, MA in 1990, and he received his BFA with honors from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in 2013. Haines was a recipient of the 2018 Massachusetts Cultural Council Artist Fellowship in Drawing, as well as the 2021 James and Audrey Foster Prize from the ICA Boston.