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Art, Ecology, and Climate: Wilderness and Wildness

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Art, Ecology, and Climate: Wilderness and Wildness

One of several e-museums devoted to ecological and climatological topics, these artworks all portray “wilderness” areas and “wild” life. Some of the works capture sublime landscapes and designated “wilderness” areas, including national parks in North America, alpine landscapes in Europe, and various regions in Africa. Others depict “wild” plants and animals, including animals held in captivity and flowers that regional gardeners regard as “weeds.” We invite you and your students to reflect critically on what it means to characterize something as “wild,” what the cultural effects of such characterizations can be, and how different artworks shape and interrogate ideas of wilderness and wildness.

More works that engage with culturally constructed ideas of wilderness and wildness can be found throughout the Art, Ecology, and Climate E-Museums, including in “Animals and Animality” and “Plants and Plantings.”

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Ben Vorlich, PL XV
Henry Morton
1819
View from Mount Washington
Thomas Cole
circa 1831
The Fall in the Hills
John Frederick Kensett
circa 1850
Falls on the Coaticook River
William Stewart Hunter Jr.
circa 1860
[Illustration for 'A Sierra Mountain Range']
William Crothers Fitler
circa 1890
[Chamounix - Montenvert Mer de Glace]
Giorgio Sommer
19th century
Matterhorn & Riffelhaus
Giorgio Sommer
circa 1880 - 1890
[Yosemite]
Louis Michel Eilshemius
circa 1899
Outer Swirl (The Outer Surf)
Frederick Judd Waugh
19th century
Evening Arizona
George Elbert Burr
circa 1930
Horseman in Landscape
Thomas Kruger
no date
[Desert landscape]
Frederic Whitaker
no date
[Mountain landscape]
Marion Boyd Allen
1926
La Chute d'Eau, Niagara Falls
Laure Albin-Guillot
circa 1930s
Bryce Canyon, Utah, 1975
Michael A. Smith
1975