Written in Stone
Stonemasonry is a craft nearly as old as civilization itself.
Art Makes Environmental Change Real
By Bill Chameides
Convincing Americans that climate change is a real and present danger has proven to be a daunting and often frustrating challenge for scientists.The Alien Aesthetic
For some, invasive plants are the scourge of the landscape. For Patterson Clark, they’re a local and abundant source of art supplies.
Fold It
The Lost Bird Project’s crowd-sourced art assignment
Are Artists the Ultimate Environmentalists?
Today’s post launches a new partnership between Conservation Magazine and Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment
By Bill Chameides
Some say there is a collectiMicrobial Bebop
Music in the key of algae
Whale Migration in Dymax
A new take on Buckminster Fuller’s iconic map
Holding Water
A cabinet modeled after snowpack data
Artist Adrien Segal has transformed cold, hard data about snow into an undulating wood sculpture.
Fleeting Beauty
Jim Denevan’s large-scale sand art makes a big visual impact—not an environmental one. Denevan often walks miles to create a single drawing.
Visualizing Carbon
For Antony Turner, pictures make a story come alive—and in the climate change story, one of the main characters is invisible.