Park with trees and people, under an elevated motorway.
Nature on Notice: Contemporary Art and Ecology
Dec
21
2024
Apr
4
2025
Aug
2
2025

From its beginnings in the late 1800s, photography has idealized the natural world. Photography elevated the pristine environment, evoking the sublime and motivating the protection of natural beauty. Simultaneously, photographic land surveys acted as guides on how to exploit nature, whether through infrastructure, extraction, or armed forces, determining who was displaced. In the Anthropocene—the current geological age in which human activity has been the dominant influence on the environment—lens-based artists are imaging an even more rapidly changing ecology. In Nature on Notice, more than 20 artists from around the globe engage in a visual dialogue about the “new nature” we are living in. Illuminating the need for both artistic and scientific imagination to counter threats to our ecology, these makers speak sensitively to the changes they are witnessing or, as a counterpoint, refer to cultures that have long revered nature while most of the world has steadily consumed it.

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"Egongyan Park, Chongqing, China," 2017, Yan Wang Preston. From the Forest series (2011-2017). Digital image. Digital image courtesy of the artist. © Yan Wang Preston.

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