Art, Nature, and the Anthropocene

How should humans relate to their environment? Are we a part of “nature”? As Tamara Ketabgian’s students show in a virtual exhibit, we are far from the first to ask these questions.

Curated by Ketabgian’s English and Environmental Studies class, “Green Romanticism” reveals how these topics also inspired Romantic artists and writers during the dawn of the Anthropocene, in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century.

This virtual exhibit features Romantic-era engravings from the Wright Museum by Gustave Doré and various artists inspired by painter J. M. W. Turner and naturalist Gilbert White. Their works explore different perspectives on the human and the natural, whether in Doré’s supernatural book illustrations, White’s scientific natural history, or later engravings and reproductions of Turner’s landscape etchings.

See the Exhibit

May 08, 2020

Contact:

Professor Tamara Ketabgian, English Department, ketabgiant@3600151.com

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