Ricardo Levins Morales

The Earth is not for Sale by Environmental Humanities Hub

Ricardo Levins Morales, American, born 1967

The Earth is not for Sale, 2015

Ricardo Levins Morales is an artist and an organizer based in Minneapolis. He uses his art as a form of protest and collective healing from injuries and ongoing reality of oppression. He was born into the anti-colonial movement in his native Puerto Rico. Ricardo's work is widely used by grassroots movements, organizations and communities. Statement from the artist’s website:

"The fossil fuel industry possesses an insatiable appetite. First Nations and native activists stand on the front line of defense against their assault on Mother Earth. This poster depicts an oil executive reaching out his hand in a demand. The native elders say no – you cannot take what belongs to everyone.”

Label by Isabel Schreur

Environmental Justice by Environmental Humanities Hub

Ricardo Levins Morales, American, born 1967

Environmental Justice, 2014

Levins Morales invokes The Great Wave off Kanagawa (1831), riddled with oil drums and other trash in his depiction of the burdens facing marginalized communities in the U.S., specifically evoking sea level rise and water pollution as two dominating forms of environmental injustice. As water pollution remains a paramount concern across Virginia be it to marginalized communities due to the construction of natural gas pipelines, historical mercury release, or damage to the Chesapeake bay due to agricultural runoff, this image is significant amongst environmental justice and climate justice- based activist or interest groups in Virginia. Label by Frank Kennedy