Powered by Grief: My adventures as a scientist, artist, and activist

Powered by Grief: My adventures as a scientist, artist, and activist

by Barton Rubenstein
Powered by Grief: My adventures as a scientist, artist, and activist

Powered by Grief: My adventures as a scientist, artist, and activist

by Barton Rubenstein

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Overview

Barton Rubenstein had a picture-perfect childhood — a loving family, idyllic summers at the beach, and a particularly close kinship with his progressive, charismatic, and devoted mom. When she died after a brutal five-year battle with cancer, Barton, just 18, found himself confronted by unbearable heartbreak. He was also saddened that his mother had not realized many of her dreams and petrified he could meet the same fate. This fear sent him headlong into a life of unexpected adventures and achievements, feeling that tomorrow could be too late.

Rubenstein is the author of numerous scientific articles, including in the Journal of Science and Optical Society of America. As a public artist, with a focus on water and wind kinetic sculpture, he has over 100 commissions worldwide, spanning a career of nearly 30 years. As an environmental activist and cofounder of the Mother Earth Project, he has used his art and that of others to activate sustainable communities in over 80 countries, both raising awareness and demanding better climate laws.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940160894041
Publisher: Barton Rubenstein
Publication date: 05/26/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 18 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Dr. Barton Rubenstein is the author of numerous scientific articles, including in Science and Optical Society of America. As a public artist, with a focus on water and wind kinetic sculpture, he has over 100 commissions worldwide, spanning a career of nearly 30 years. His portfolio includes the biennially presented Portrait of a Nation Award for the Smithsonian Institution. In 2005-2007, Rubenstein was invited to be a member of a National Academy of Sciences Committee to redesign the $100 bill. His recommendation to include a blue ribbon to avert counterfeiting was subsequently introduced into the new design at the Bureau of Printing and Engraving.

As an environmental activist and cofounder of the Mother Earth Project, he has used his art and that of others to activate sustainable communities in over 80 countries, both raising awareness and demanding better climate laws. The physical footprint of his family’s project is the Mother Earth Sculpture, a monumental 15’ high sculpture that Rubenstein designed with the likeness of the human profile, namely his mother, the subject and inspiration of this memoir. It is now in countries worldwide, including Washington, DC, Jerusalem, Israel, Guilin, China, Jaipur, India, Yaoundé, Cameroon, and Bonn, Germany. These sculptures are intentionally located at sites where sustainability events and climate strikes take place. The Mother Earth Project has a following of over a hundred thousand worldwide, including partnerships with youth climate activists of Greta Thunberg’s Friday For Future movement, the Girl Scouts of America, and the Citizens Climate International, and the United Nations Environment Programme.

Rubenstein has received numerous awards, including the Distinguished Alumni Award from his alma mater Sidwell Friends School, Washington, DC and the Creativity Award from Moment Magazine.
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