News

Artist-in-Residence at MUSE (Museo delle Scienz...
Mary is currently in Trento, Italy as the first artist in residence at MUSE (Museo delle Scienze), learning about the Dolomites with scientists and biologists prior to building a permanent...
Artist-in-Residence at MUSE (Museo delle Scienz...
Mary is currently in Trento, Italy as the first artist in residence at MUSE (Museo delle Scienze), learning about the Dolomites with scientists and biologists prior to building a permanent...

New York Magazine Interview
Artist Mary Mattingly creates pieces about consumption and ecology by doing things like tying up all her belongings into five-foot-wide bundles, planting a floating vegetable garden, and conducting a yearlong public research project on New...
New York Magazine Interview
Artist Mary Mattingly creates pieces about consumption and ecology by doing things like tying up all her belongings into five-foot-wide bundles, planting a floating vegetable garden, and conducting a yearlong public research project on New...

New York Times: T Magazine story
The Optimistic Art of Mary Mattingly The artist’s work addresses future climate crises while attempting to make the urban environment a better place to live right now through art. By Zoë...
New York Times: T Magazine story
The Optimistic Art of Mary Mattingly The artist’s work addresses future climate crises while attempting to make the urban environment a better place to live right now through art. By Zoë...

What Happens After
New Book Coming Nov. 2022: Time to reconsider what we take for granted and what responsibilities we have to the planet—the sustainable art of Mary Mattingly.
What Happens After
New Book Coming Nov. 2022: Time to reconsider what we take for granted and what responsibilities we have to the planet—the sustainable art of Mary Mattingly.

"Public Water" Audio Guide Launched
Public Water brings attention to the rarely-seen labor that humans (and non-humans) do to care for New York City’s drinking water.
"Public Water" Audio Guide Launched
Public Water brings attention to the rarely-seen labor that humans (and non-humans) do to care for New York City’s drinking water.