“Forces of Nature: Voices that Shaped Environmentalism” presents some of the key people—scientists, politicians, activists, writers and artists—whose work has influenced attitudes toward the environment in the United States from the late 19th century until today. The exhibition traces a history of the movement from turn-of-the-20th-century conservationism to mid-20th-century environmentalism and its backlash. It also addresses present-day action on environmental justice, biodiversity and climate. Drawing mainly from the National Portrait Gallery’s collection, “Forces of Nature: Voices that Shaped Environmentalism” features more than 25 portraits of people who have made an enduring impact on public perceptions of the natural world, including the well-known figures Rachel Carson, George Washington Carver, Maya Lin, Henry David Thoreau and Edward O. Wilson. The exhibition will bring together portraiture, visual biography and the sitters’ own words to probe this important—and complicated—history.
Open 7 days a week
11:30am – 7pm
Closed Dec. 25
One Life Gallery, 2nd floor
National Portrait Gallery
8th and G Streets NW
Washington, DC
38.898454512813, -77.0229439
Forces of Nature: Voices that Shaped Environmentalism