ENVIRONMENTAL GRAPHITI

Art Meets Science

Environmental Graphiti – The Art of Climate Change – uses contemporary art to dramatize the critical science of climate change. Graphs, charts, numbers and words reflecting key facts about how our world is changing are transformed into stunning, vibrant images. There are now over 75 digital painting in this series which has been exhibited both nationally and internationally. To view the art and learn more about the mission please visit website (click below).

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What’s your cause?

The artist, Alisa Singer, also works with various non-profit organizations, as well as educational and governmental institutions, to create art from graphic data that expresses the organization’s special message and mission.

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Unmasked

They’re everywhere – sidewalks, bushes, hanging from fences, floating in pools of water with other debris and littering lawns and beaches – as ubiquitous as plastic water bottles and creating many of the same environmental risks. But these masks are so much more than just abandoned paper and fabric. They are the “flotsam and jetsam” of our pandemic wreckage - freighted with emotional significance and forever connecting us to, and reminding us of, an extraordinarily painful experience.

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DAY BY DAY

An Artistic Journey through a Season of Chemotherapy

This series of 20 digital paintings reflects the artist’s personal challenge to experience chemotherapy, not through the lens of fear and anxiety, but though the colors, shapes and textures of the actual moods and experiences of the particular day.  This art is the inspirational record of the effort to allow each day to “paint itself”, reflecting the broad spectrum of tones, hues, and values that express the infinite experiences and feelings that make up all of our days.

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ART AGAINST HATE

Hatred and Heroism. Oppression and Resistance. Then and Now.

In this series, the pairing of past and present symbols of hate and repression serves as a chilling reminder of the enduring insight of these words:

“…(T)he only clue to what man can do is what man has done….”
R.G. Collingwood – The Idea of History, 1946

At the same time, these paintings celebrate the strength and heroism of those who struggled in the past against hatred, intolerance and bigotry, and of those who are, today, taking up the mantle of resistance against this growing threat to our democratic values and our humanity.

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