Brazilian street artist Mundano's latest work incorporates ash from forest fires and mud from flooding in Brazil to create a ...
The 38-year-old's self-described "artivism"—combining activism with art—doesn't stop at the mural. He collected materials directly from sites impacted by climate disasters, including ashes from the ...
Image Mundano, a street artist, mixing water, varnish and ash collected from fires that had ripped through a Brazilian rainforest to create a palette of gray tones. Image The mural is near a main ...
Environmental activists in Brazil want US farming giant Cargill to keep its promise to act against deforestation—and they have used destroyed rainforest ... feet tall. A mural on the side ...
As the COP29 climate talks started Monday in Azerbaijan, an Indigenous leader half a world away is literally towering over ...
Over 30 meters (98.4 feet) high and 48 meters (157.5 feet) wide, the mural depicts deforestation and severe drought in the Amazon Rainforest with its parched brown earth and gray tree stumps.
The mural was painted with colors made with the ash from forest fires in Brazil, including the Amazon, where swathes of rainforest have been destroyed by recent blazes in the worst drought on record.
The mural was painted with colors made with the ash from forest fires in Brazil, including the Amazon, where swathes of rainforest have been destroyed by recent blazes in the worst drought on record.