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Earthly - Capturing climate change through art

Capturing climate change through art

Earthly

02/14/24 • 32 min

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Humans have forever turned to nature for artistic inspiration. The earliest cave paintings are at least 64,000 years old and depict images of wild animals, landscapes, and even the heavens. More recently, photographer Ansel Adams, poet Wendell Berry, sculptor Andy Goldsworthy, and movie director Werner Herzog have all produced great art by musing on the material world.
Jonathan's guest on Earthly, continues in that tradition. Todd Anderson collaborates with scientists and travels to some of the world’s most remote environments to see what they see only with the eye of an artist. Then Anderson creates prints using woodcuts to capture moments in time as landscapes are altered by rising temperatures.
Anderson is going to tell us about his process, inspiration, and what he hopes his art says about the natural world.
SHOW NOTES
Journey to the Ice
Thin Ice
Todd Anderson's Work

For show notes and additonal resources, visit https://blogs.clemson.edu/earthly/.
Earthly is hosted and produced by Clemson University.

02/14/24 • 32 min

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Earthly - Capturing climate change through art

Transcript

Intro (00:01):

Welcome to Earthly, a Clemson University podcast discussing issues of agriculture, horticulture, nature, and design impacting the world nation, state of South Carolina and even your home. Here's your host, Jonathan Vet.

Jonathan Veit (

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