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Art, Ecology, and and Climate: Extraction

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Art, Ecology, and and Climate: Extraction

One of several e-museums devoted to ecological and climatological topics, these artworks depict laborers and industries engaged in processes of environmental extraction, such as mining, logging, shell collecting, and excavating. Many of the works highlight processes whereby valuable metals, minerals, rocks, soils, and fossil fuels are extracted from the ground and refined. The e-museum also includes several photographs and stereographs from 19th-century Japan that document the stages of silk production, as well as a photographic series that captures the processes used to log and mill old-growth forests in northern California in the early twentieth century. Though many of these artworks have a documentary quality, all of them imply some kind of stance towards the industries and environmental impacts they depict. We invite you to think critically about how different artworks use elements of form, content, and style to create these stances, especially when considering their target audiences.

More images of extraction can be found in other Art, Ecology, and Climate E-Museums, including “Power and Energy,” “Pollution and Contamination,” and “The Anthropocene.”

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Coal-Mine of Treuil
Jacques Gérard Milbert
1823 - 1824
Coal Miners, Alabama
Howard Cook
1935
Coal
Seth Hoffman
no date
Coal Mine Country
Harry Gottlieb
circa 1935
Coal Pickers
Harry Gottlieb
1936
Memento of the Gold Rush Era
Frederic Whitaker
20th century
Zinc Plant
Harry Gottlieb
no date
Steel Mills
Richard Florsheim
circa 1962
Night Dredging
David Burke
circa 1940
[Landscape with steam shovel]
Frederic Whitaker
June 29, 1940
Cement Piles
Harry Gottlieb
1932
Rockefeller Center
Berenice Abbott
circa 1932, printed later
Earth Pushers
Melody Vaughn
2016
The Drillers
Reginald Marsh
1929
Upper Quarry
Bolton Coit Brown
1924
Granite quarry at Stonington, Maine
Berenice Abbott
circa 1965