
Art, Science, and Imagining the Planet’s Future
In Conversation with Sean Decatur and Maya Lin
Presented by: The American Museum of Natural History
Date and time: Wednesday, November 13, 2024 at 7pm
Location: American Museum of Natural History – In the Gilder Center, please enter from 79th street and Columbus Ave
Accessibility: ASL interpretation is provided and reserved seats for Deaf guests
Tickets: $8 for general public, $5 for members
About the Event: As the climate crisis intensifies, how can art raise awareness of its causes and consequences and inspire solutions and action? In this conversation, Maya Lin, world-renowned sculptor of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and Museum President Sean Decatur will explore the powerful role of art, including Lin’s last memorial, an environmental initiative called What is Missing?
Through more than a dozen installations in several mediums and in multiple places—including 2021’s Ghost Forest in New York City’s Madison Square Park—Lin has worked to highlight the devastating effects of habitat loss, biodiversity loss, and climate change and to help re-think the problems we face and visualize big-picture solutions.
Maya Lin is known for her large-scale environmental artworks, her architectural works, and her memorial designs. Lin’s art explores how we experience and relate to landscape, setting up a systematic ordering of the land that is tied to history, memory, time, and language.
Link to the program: https://www.amnh.org/calendar/maya-lin-sean-decatur
Join Our Accessible Events Email List!
Stay connected with inclusive events made for everyone! From sign language interpretation and live captioning (CART) to audio description and multilingual interpretation, each event on our calendar offers full accessibility. Sign up to receive monthly email updates and never miss an opportunity to participate!