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An ad agency in Boulder, Colo., has released a series of dystopian tourism posters for free, to support climate-change research ahead of the March for Science, scheduled for April 22.
That's what prompted her to recreate iconic National Park Service posters as the parks could look in 2050. SEE ALSO: The science march is about 'hope' for a fact-based future ...
The posters, originally commissioned by the art collective The Canary Project, take different angles on what it means to combat climate change and create a sustainable world.
Climate change is not some far-off, future problem we will have to face in a few decades. The reality is, it’s happening right now, and is threatening small and large businesses alike. For ...
Hannah Rothstein created posters based on 1940s ads for national parks. Her work imagines what parks will look like in 2050, after climate change has worsened.
For years now, the melting ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica have been the poster children for climate change, iconic harbingers of a warming world. A new documentary, “Chasing Coral ...
Editor, Regarding the Nov. 28 column, “ Religion and the coming environmental storms</a>:” Here are a few quotes not often found in mainstream media from some experts on the global warming agenda.
The drive to dislodge the Bush administration and Congress from their lethargic response to climate change is not likely to turn on the ice worm. A photogenic symbol of global warming was needed ...
How Climate Change Could Ravage America’s National Parks, In 7 Ominous Posters. The artist Hannah Rothstein reimagines classic WPA posters for a world wracked by drought, flooding, fires, ...
Real-life protests might be on hold, but activism has moved over into the digital realm – as shown by Mate Act Now’s set of 100 posters, created by the likes of Leta Sobieraski, Vince Frost and ...