YBG-Chicago

The Yale Blue Green Chicago Chapter is a home for Windy City-area alumni interested in sustainability and the environment. 

YBG-Chicago Chair

Judith Singleton, ’00 MA, Dominican University

Margot McMahon ’84, Eco-Artist/Author

Questions? Email ybgchicago@gmail.com

Upcoming Events

January 2026

The Ring of Fire Exhibition and Artist Talk: Margot McMahon

Chicago Cultural Center January 20-March 6, 2026 Exhibition

The Ring of Fire

The Ring of Fire

Emerald Fish lettuce Coral

78 East Washington, Chicago, IL

Artist Talk January 22, 12:00 CST

Coral reefs are an ancient microcosm with a changing diversity of phantasmagoric beauty. As a crucial building block of our planet. Coral covers 1% of the ocean floor and feeds twenty-five percent of sea life, the urgency to save coral from repeated bleaching episodes is becoming clear. The Ring of Fire and Coral Triangle, located in the Western Pacific Ocean, shows why it matters.

Over the seven years of reef recovery worldwide, McMahon painted her Ring of Fire series to show the symbiotic relationship between a vast variety of coral reefs: a plant, animal, and mineral that is the most diverse ecosystem on earth. Her ocean landscapes also emulate prayer cloths to express a spiritual energy that conveys healing, while highlighting the biodiversity and stunning magnificence of the reefs. Through her technique mixte process, combining egg tempera and oil paints, McMahon’s coral reefs are luminous, as light penetrates and reflects through the layers, giving the paintings a depth and vibrancy that echo the resonance of the ocean.

Past Events

Crocheting Coral with Plarn, plastic yarn

Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art and Oak Park Art League on June 7, 1:00-3:00, 2025 
Crocheting Coral with Plarn, plastic yarn

Over 25,000 “reefers” have crocheted coral worldwide for more than 50 crafted reefs that are a plea for sustaining eco-systems of our “rainforests of the sea.” Reefs are threatened by warmer oceans and struggling in their fourth global bleaching event. Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art, during Lichen and Coral: Algae Symbiosis Exhibition by Sandra Wilcoxon and Margot McMahon, offers a workshop: Crocheting Coral in Plastic YarnNo experience is needed. Bring your own hooks, we’ll supply the plastic. Participants will make plastic yarn from single use plastic bags and crochet coral polyps. Recycling plastic brings awareness of how plastic waste affects life on land and sea. Crocheters are invited to contribute to the Plarn Coral Reef during a July Spiral Exhibition at Oak Park Art League.

Ring of Fire: Friends, Reefs, and Bouncing Back

Epiphany Center for the Arts
Ring of Fire: Friends, Reefs, and Bouncing Back
201 S Ashland Avenue
May 9-July 25, 2025

Coral reefs are an ancient microcosm with a changing diversity of phantasmagoric beauty. As a crucial building block of our planet. Coral covers 1% of the ocean floor and feeds twenty-five percent of sea life, the urgency to save coral from repeated bleaching episodes is becoming clear. The Ring of Fire and Coral Triangle, located in the Western Pacific Ocean, shows why it matters.

Endorsed by UNESCO for ocean awareness during the United Nations Ocean Decade, Margot McMahon’s Ring of Fire: Friends, Reefs, and Bouncing Back exhibit brings awareness to how human activities, such as burning fossil fuels, significantly contribute to climate change and rising sea temperatures, which severely impacts ocean life and marine biodiversity. United States’ weather patterns originate in the Southern Pacific Ocean. A warmer ocean slows currents causing west coast droughts, more volatile storms, and Midwest flooding.

On McMahon’s 2017 diving excursion to the Palauan reefs in the Ring of Fire with a childhood friend, they witnessed the largest recorded global bleaching event, impacting the Coral Triangle: a marine epicenter with the highest coral reef and fish diversity in the world. On a return trip in 2023, the two friends and environmental activists observed a revitalization of the coral reefs through a healthy reef bounce-back. Carbon emission reduction during Covid -19’s global lockdown allowed the reefs to heal along with conservation efforts and sustainable practices.

Over the seven years of reef recovery worldwide, McMahon painted her Ring of Fire series to show the symbiotic relationship between a vast variety of coral reefs: a plant, animal, and mineral that is the most diverse ecosystem on earth. Her ocean landscapes also emulate prayer cloths to express a spiritual energy that conveys healing, while highlighting the biodiversity and stunning magnificence of the reefs. Through her technique mixte process, combining egg tempera and oil paints, McMahon’s coral reefs are luminous, as light penetrates and reflects through the layers, giving the paintings a depth and vibrancy that echo the resonance of the ocean.

Coral reef bleaching events are caused by environmental stressors that include increased water temperatures due to global warming and human pollution. These stressors disrupt the interdependent relationship between coral and algae, leading to the whitening or bleaching of corals. With the increase of carbon emissions since 2023, the world is currently experiencing its fourth global coral bleaching event, which NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) announced in April 2024 and is ongoing. This event has affected coral reefs across all major ocean basins, including the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans.

Lichen and Coral: Algae Symbiosis on Land & Sea

Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art hosts
Artist Talk by Margot McMahon
Lichen and Coral: Algae Symbiosis on Land & Sea
May 10, 2025 1:00 pm
Painting Polyp Portraits

Join Margot as she slips off an Indonesian schooner into the phantasmagoric Coral Triangle reefs for the Greatest Bounce Back of coral on Earth! Margot shows the wonder of crinoids, tunicates, nudibranchs and giant clams speckled in a rainbow of stripes, herringbone, and polka dots. When a London gallery challenged artists to make a drawing a day in April 2020, Margot drew her coral reef photographs. She’s been painting coral since.
Lichen and Coral Exhibition: https://uima-chicago.org/upcomingexhibition
Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ukraininan-institute-of-modern-art-artist-talk-tickets-1343982631229?aff=oddtdtcreator
Painting Polyp Portraits: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JNKF3utyD3g
Painting with Technique Mix

POETRY • ECOLOGY • RESTORATION
APRIL 27 11:00-2:00

To infuse society with a radical hope, volunteers will tend Gwendolyn Brooks Park and The Oracle of Bronzeville monument to the first black, woman, and writer in a Chicago Park. Each participant is invited to write a poem during the Poetry Workshop lead by acclaimed poet Kira Tucker and Poet Laureate of Highland Park, Laura Joyce Hubbard.  After monument care, poems will be written at Little Black Pearl’s Carver 47 Café’ Farm Table to perpetuate the teaching s of Gwendolyn Brooks. 

Earth Day 2024 at Gwendolyn Brooks Park 46 th and Greenwood, Chicago Illinois 11:00-2:00.

Earth Day tidy-up of Gwendolyn Brooks Park followed by a poetry workshop at Little Black Pearl’s Carver 47 Café. A collaboration with Yale Chicago, Northwestern University and University of Chicago.
Gwendolyn Brooks Park
Kenwood neighborhood
Greenwood at 46th Street
Chicago, Illinois
Contact: Margot McMahon (708)228-2545  mcmahonmargot@gmail.com
 
ASAP! Video https://vimeo.com/416453557