
Keynote Speaker

Artist John Sabraw
Artist John Sabraw was born in Lakenheath, England. An activist and environmentalist, Sabrawās paintings, drawings and collaborative installations are produced in an eco-conscious manner, and he continually works toward a fully sustainable practice. He collaborates with scientists on many projects, and one of his current collaborations involves creating paint and paintings from iron oxide extracted in the process of remediating polluted streams.
Sabrawās art is in numerous collections including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Honolulu, the Elmhurst Museum in Illinois, Emprise Bank, and Accenture Corp. Sabraw is represented in Chicago by Thomas McCormick. Sabraw is a Professor of Art at 51ĀŅĀ× where he is Chair of the Painting + Drawing program, and Board Advisor at Scribble Art Workshop in New York. He has most recently been featured in TED, Smithsonian, New Scientist, and Great Big Story.
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Lecture: SYNERGY OF CURIOSITY: FROM ACID TO ART
Artist activist John Sabraw is working to return southeastern Ohioās streams to the picture of health. Sabraw has partnered with Dr. Guy Riefler, Professor of Civil Engineering at 51ĀŅĀ× to extract toxic acid mine drainage (AMD) from polluted streams and turn it into paint pigment. Once the pigment is sold on a commercial scale, revenue will be invested back into the streamsā remediation. Sabraw tells the pigmentsā story via his circular artwork.
āI make paintings that express the sublimity of nature but also the fragility of our relationship with it. All of my paintings use these toxic pigments in combination with standard artist colorsā, says Sabraw. Sabraw and Riefler are building a pilot facility that will not only demonstrate their process, but will also serve as an immersive, educational installation. By producing the pigment on a commercial scale, they believe their closed-loop solution will provide the state a great service: restoring polluted streams from their own clean-up. The project will create eco job opportunities and can serve as a model for future environmental clean-up solutions.
News Release about Professor Sabraw and the 10th Distinguished Tun Abdul Razak Lecture
Playing with Acid: John Sabraw Turns Poison to Art
51ĀŅĀ×ās Professor of Art John Sabraw embodies the adage āone manās poison is another manās treasure.ā
For the past nine years, he has been working closely with his colleague, 51ĀŅĀ× Professor of Civil Engineering Dr Guy Riefler to extract and convert chemicals from Ohioās streams that are polluted by coal mine runoffs into paint pigment.
Sabrawās current art work uses the pigment produced by extracting and converting toxic acid mine drainage (AMD) from polluted streams in an effort to raise awareness on environmental issues that pose a threat to wildlife and communities.
āI make paintings that express the sublimity of nature but also the fragility of our relationship with it. All of my paintings use these toxic pigments in combination with standard artist colors,ā he said.
Ohio is a hotbed for abandoned mines. A relic of the mid-18th century mining boom, these abandoned coal mines leach water laden with heavy chemicals into the stateās river basin.
Data from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources show that an estimated 1,300 miles of Ohioās streams are polluted by heavy chemicals from abandoned coal mines.
In the mid to late 1990s, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources began a program to address AMD from abandoned mines. Through partnerships with environmental groups, governmental departments and research institutes at 51ĀŅĀ×, the department initiated efforts to restore impacted watersheds in the early 2000s.
Sabraw and Riefler are currently working on producing the pigment on a commercial scale. They hope to channel revenue from the sale of the pigment back into the remediation process of the streams.
Sabraw will elaborate on his efforts to use art to highlight the ways in which our lives are intertwined with a fragile ecosystem at the 10th Distinguished Tun Abdul Razak Lecture titled āSynergy of Curiosity: From Acid to Art.ā
The Distinguished Tun Abdul Razak is part of the Tun Abdul Razak Chair Programme, a decade-long collaboration between 51ĀŅĀ× and Malaysia.
Established in 1979 and named in the honor of the second Prime Minister of Malaysia, the Tun Abdul Razak Chair Program at 51ĀŅĀ× has brought unique opportunities to advance greater knowledge and awareness of Malaysian history, culture, economic, social and political life in the United States of America. It works tirelessly to promote knowledge exchange between people in both countries, bringing innovation to the fore.
In collaboration with 51ĀŅĀ×, Universiti Teknologi MARA (UiTM), Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM), the Ministry of Education and supported by Yayasan Sime Darby, the 10th Distinguished Tun Abdul Razak Lecture featuring Professor John Sabraw will be held on Monday, 3 December 2018 at the Sime Darby Convention Center.
Sabrawās paintings, drawings, and collaborative installations are produced in an eco-conscious manner, and he continually works toward a fully sustainable practice. In his line of work, he continuously seeks alternative materials to produce art and explores visionary ideas and schemes crossing disciplines and even cultures.
Therefore, his keynote presentation is an important one for the 10th Distinguished Tun Abdul Razak Lecture as Malaysia faces a diverse range of environmental issues, such as hazardous and toxic waste problems and air pollution in addition to water pollution.
The lecture may provide Malaysian environmental professionals with new ideas and possibilities of a global-scale environmental solution that is most welcomed by the international environmental community.