by eab | Sep 16, 2018 | Blog |
Whoa, ah, mercy mercy me Oh things ain’t what they used to be, no no Where did all the blue skies go? Poison is the wind that blows from the north and south and east Whoa mercy, mercy me, Oh things ain’t what they used to be, no no Oil wasted on the oceans...
by eab | Sep 12, 2018 | Blog |
Two poets and climate activists, Aka Niviana from Greeland, and Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner from the Marshall Islands, teamed up to write and perform the poem Rise in the fjords and glaciers of Greenland, with the help of glaciologist Jason Box who travels to Greenland every...
by eab | Sep 9, 2018 | Blog |
Edward Burtynsky is a Canadian photographer and filmmaker whose work focuses on nature as transformed through industry. In collaboration with Nicholas de Pencier and Jennifer Baichwal, Burtynsky has created a multidisciplinary exploration of the human impact on the...
by eab | Sep 6, 2018 | Blog |
“To this day, subsistence culture is the only time-tested mode of human sustainability on this planet. It is also the way of life that is being destroyed the fastest by civilization. Civilization, which began just over ten thousand years ago in the Fertile...
by eab | Sep 3, 2018 | Blog |
WaterMarks is a series by Paul Harmon, an Australian photographer, featuring landscapes of the Murray-Darling river basin in New South Wales, Australia. This river supported indigenous people in Australia for many thousands of years; then about 170 years ago these...
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