

CREATIVE EARTH
DIRECTORY
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No matter the future, we believe that being connected to knitted networks of kin will be one of the most powerful and supportive tools available to us all. Developing this network is one of our priorities.
Take a look at the map view to see who is close by that you can connect with, or perhaps you are travelling somewhere and would like to discover more about creative communities at your destination? Maybe you are looking for organistations and creatives to collaborate with? Whatever it may be this is the place to find it. Please share with all those who you think will benefit.
Reach out, connect, collaborate and enjoy!
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Land Art Collective
CREATIVE AMBASSADORS
Across the world our Creative Ambassadors are connecting the dots between us all and advocating for creative collaboration with Land, Sea & Sky.

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Oyewole Lawal
NIGERIA
Born in Lagos, Nigeria, Oyewole Lawal (1988) is a photographer and visual artist with a passion for storytelling. His journey into photography began in late 2020, starting with just a smartphone before transitioning to a DSLR camera in late 2021.
With a background in sociology from the University of Lagos, Oyewole’s style is influenced by sociological theories such as functionalism and Marxism. He uses his photography to critique and explore social issues, aiming to document the complexities of human experience and the evolving dynamics between individuals and their environments. By doing so, Lawal brings attention to marginalized voices and challenges stereotypes.
Currently, Oyewole is working on an environmental and social story, ‘Guardian of Gaia’, in Nigeria.
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Lilith Piper
UNITED KINGDOM
Lilith Piper (b.1999). I am a fourth generation landscape painter with a deep-rooted connection to Avalon and the Somerset landscape (UK). My practice spans set design, performance art, land art, and mural painting—each grounded in a reverence for place and the environment. Live performance is central to my work; as the creative producer and programmer of the Tree Stage in Glastonbury Festival’s Woodsies area (UK). I explore the ceremonial power of gathering in a specific place and time to share stories, foster transformation, and cultivate more attentive, reciprocal relationships with the natural world. The ways that environment holds a kind of deep time and animacy, a presence I seek to honour in my work.
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Riya Panwar
UNITED KINGDOM
Riya Panwar is a visual artist and communicator based in London, specializing in alternative photography. Her work explores the chemistry of photographic materials with a focus on imperfection, aiming to reduce the use of toxic methods while innovating new approaches to visual storytelling and communication.
Riya is dedicated to sustainable practices that make art and design more accessible and less intimidating. Her work has been featured in Vogue India and Homegrown, and internationally showcased at Tokyo’s Shibuya MODI building, the Women Alternative Photography Community exhibition, and the Symbiosis II group exhibition by the London Alternative Photography Collective at Four Corners.
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Isabella Morales Salis
BRAZIL
Isabella Morales Salis is a queer Brazilian interdisciplinary artist based in London. Her practice explores themes of identity, ecological consciousness, and personal mythology through painting, installation, and narrative work. Rooted in drawing from reality and imagination, Isabella uses visual narrative as a way to witness and process lived experience—personal, political, and planetary. Her work often invites others into spaces of reflection and transformation, blending intimacy with broader social and environmental concerns.
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Jacqueline Maloney
USA
Jacqueline Maloney currently lives and works in unceded Tsalagi territory, present day North Carolina, in a studio in her off-grid home. She chops her wood and carries her water from a spring at the feet of the Black Mountains. She has cultivated deep curiosity about the natural world since her childhood, throughout which she lived close to the sea in unceded Wabanaki territory, or present day Southern Maine. Barefoot afternoons in pine and birch forest and meanderings through tidepools and rocky beaches nurtured an early curiosity, and also a deep sense of relationship to the world beyond the sidewalk. This curiosity has since fostered a deep concern for her species’ relationship to the nonhuman, as she sniffs out the tracks we leave behind us through an unraveling landscape. It is this care that fuels the questions which unfold and augment her drawings and paintings.
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Michael Aboya
GHANA
Formerly pursuing a career in computer science, Aboya transitioned into photography following a deep personal loss, channeling his emotion into the visual arts. Self-taught and intuitive, his creative journey is deeply rooted in human connection and emotional truth.
Michael’s work has been featured by leading platforms including BBC, Forbes, Adobe, and National Geographic, and he was a winner of the Agora Awards 2019 for the photograph Songs of Freedom. He continues to use his art to inspire, provoke reflection, and amplify African stories on the global stage.
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Cheryl Silvawood
SINGAPORE / UK
Originally from Singapore and a graduate in media and mass communication, Cheryl Silvawood started out in professional photography and journalism in 2002, travelling around the world on assignment. Based in North Devon, UK, I am a conservation forester, arborist, trees and woodlands surveyor/consultant with a speciality for ancient & veteran trees. I am also an ATI (Ancient Tree Inventory) verifier for the Woodland Trust and a trustee at the ATF (Ancient Tree Forum), which has pioneered the conservation of ancient trees for over 20 years; in addition I am a trustee at Hakeford Woods CIO and a director at Evolving Events CIC. I also work part-time for The Resurgence Trust as PA to Satish Kumar, supporting their ambassadorial work to promote positive change and connection to spirit, people and the environment. I author a blog (https://inalandofgiants.blog/) where I write about my adventures with trees and share my growing industry experiences through various platforms like social media, online articles, BBC Gardener’s World, podcasts, talks and guided walks.
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Zanagee Artis
USA
Zanagee Artis advocates for policies to end oil and gas leasing and development on public lands and waters. His work focuses on limiting offshore drilling, protecting the Arctic Ocean, and oil and gas well risk mitigation and cleanup. He co-authored A Kids Book About Climate Change and is the co-host of the associated podcast, 1 Point 5: A Kids Podcast About Climate Justice. Artis is also a founder of Zero Hour, a global youth-led climate justice organization based in the United States. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Brown University and is based in NRDC's Washington, D.C., office.
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Sabrina Lieb
GERMANY
I am a donor child, meaning I was conceived through an anonymous sperm donation in 1983. In Germany alone, there are around 100,000 to 125,000 donor children (also known as donor-ospring or donor-conceived persons). Because I lack knowledge of 50 percent of my biological identity, nature has always been an important companion to me. Through it, I've experienced a sense of identity and connection, and a sense of belonging to the greater whole, which is much more than just belonging to two people I call father and mother. This is also reflected in my art. Nature plays a major role in my ink drawings, as well as in my portrait photography, which I aOectionately call "human nature photography." There, I try to depict the vulnerability of humans in contact with the sensual nature. I also work as a nature process facilitator.
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Crissy Fernando
SRI LANKA
Crissy Fernando is a Sri Lanka-based visual artist whose interdisciplinary practice investigates the symbiotic relationship between humans and the natural environment. Informed by prehistoric symbolism, traditional Sri Lankan visual culture, and contemporary ecological concerns, her work emphasizes materiality and process. She primarily works with earth pigments, natural dyes, and soil particularly laterite-rich ochres integrating site-specific materials to explore concepts of place, memory, and embodied connection. With over a decade of self directed practice and formal training through a Foundation in Fine Arts, her work engages land-based methodologies and sensory experience to question the boundaries between nature, culture, and the self. -
Erin Smith
SOUTH AFRICA
Erin Smith is a visual artist from Gqeberha, South Africa, where she completed her master’s degree in fine art at Nelson Mandela University under the SARCHI Chair in Identities and Social Cohesion in Africa. Her longstanding passion for environmentalism and conscious stewardship of the Earth led her to explore Earth-friendly artmaking techniques and materials as part of her master’s research, which resulted in a body of site-specific land art made entirely from organic materials and found objects. Through making this work, Erin was awoken to the transformative power of site-specific artmaking as a tool for reinforcing a deeper personal relationship with the wider natural world. With this as a foundation, her artistic practice continues to explore themes of interconnectivity and humans’ place in wider Nature. Outside of her work, Erin enjoys hiking, spending time with her cats, and fire dancing. -
Benedetta Fabbri
SICILLY
I am a classically trained violinist and sound practitioner with a Master’s degree in Violin and Music Performance from the Giuseppe Verdi State Conservatory in Turin. While my foundation is in classical orchestral performance, over the years, my work has evolved into a multidisciplinary artistic practice through ethnomusicological study of vibrational medicine across cultures. I explore the role of ritual in shaping sound performance as a shared, immersive, therapeutic act.
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Henry Fletcher
The earth’s dreams can be our dreams…..
My creative practice emerges from relationship to place
—the land and sea and their diverse rattles of life.
Pattern, mark and colour resonate, and movement guides most of what I do.I aim to help others fall in love with the Earth, exploring and offering a variety of creative approaches & facilitated pathways to help weave wild relationships within the heart.
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Edie Evans
UNITED KINGDOM
As an artist working at the intersection of ecology, access, and material care, my practice is deeply rooted in reciprocity - a reciprocal process between land, material, maker, and audience. I engage with wild clays, gathered materials, and reclaimed textiles to create sculptural installations and environments that centre sensory experience and foster environmental awareness. My work unfolds through a collaborative dialogue with place and material, where each element responds to and shapes the other over time. This process respects the agency of natural materials and the rhythms of the landscape, embracing non-linear time and the slow unfolding of relationships. I am driven by a desire to reconnect people with the natural world through direct, tactile engagement, emphasising touch and care as modes of knowledge and connection. As a disabled and neurodivergent artist, I navigate my practice through fluctuating capacities and attentiveness to pace, which informs a patient, embodied approach to making. This attentiveness cultivates spaces where diverse modes of interaction and learning are welcomed and valued. -
Lora Aziz
EGYPT / UK
Lora Aziz is a British Egyptian artist whose creative practice reimagines contemporary cross-cultural relationships with land and nature through wildcrafting, community herbalism, earth science and visual ethnobotany.
Her latest project and exhibition Motanafas: A space to connect is a UK – Egypt collaboration forming part of the British Council’s COP27 Creative Commissions that brings together art, science and digital technology as an innovative, interdisciplinary, inclusive response to climate change. Lora Aziz is an interdisciplinary artist, land-based cultural producer, and creative strategist based in Suffolk, UK. Her work weaves together ecology, memory, and storytelling through workshops, residencies, foraging walks, and community rituals. With a background in anthropology and visual ethnobotany, she explores themes of belonging, slow economies, and cultural care — from CSA farms to international climate platforms.
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Laura Buckle
UNITED KINGDOM
My current research seeks to unravel the tightly woven complexities of this vast and often opaque system, examining how issues of class and environmental degradation intersect. The textile industry represents one of the most intricate and far-reaching supply chains in global manufacturing. By deconstructing and reconstructing textile waste, my work interrogates the systems at play and calls to account those responsible for perpetuating environmental harm and social injustice. As a working-class, environmentally focused artist, my practice aims to raise awareness of and inspire action against the global climate crisis. Through socially engaged methods, I create work that invites dialogue and fosters change at both community and individual levels. Using material practices to shift perspectives, I strive to develop sustainable, creative solutions that advocate for ecological preservation.
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Elizabeth Tomos
UNITED KINGDOM
For me, tackling the ecological crisis is now the only thing that matters. It is everything. It is complex. It is political. Ecological justice is social justice. There is no environmental justice without gender and racial justice, for example. This is a mycelial network of interconnecting issues that need sensitive and intersectional solutions. This is the work art needs to do. As an artist, it is important to me to be “at work in the ruins” (Dougald Hine). I am also a director and curator for Trans- States, which is a small community interest company dedicated to the scholarship of contemporary occulture and esotericism. As a result, this brings a spiritual dimension to my thinking about ecology and climate change. I am interested in the ways that esoteric thought can give us new ways to imagine and access our past, present, and future.
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Ryhan M.Y
JAPAN
Ryhan resides in Japan and works within the agriculture sector. From farming green tea to researching food products (sea salt and spices) for her graduate studies, practising photography has provided her with a way of reconciling the paradoxical arcs of academia and art. Visual images are her method of bridging a product’s well grieved past to present day audiences.
She is also currently a PhD student at Kyoto University’s Graduate School of Agriculture. Her research focuses on resource colonialism and the cultural value of heritage agriculture products. Specifically delving into the ethical spaces of food production between Indonesia, Japan, and the Netherlands. With a deep yearning to bring her findings to a wider audience, traversing between nostalgia and the allure of new memories is the fabric of Ryhan’s unapologetically human behaviour.
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Genevieve Rae
AOTEAROA (New Zealand)
I am a textile and community artist based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara (Wellington) Aotearoa (New Zealand). My work is led by multispecies philosophy and aims to take notice of, and honor, the nonhuman beings we are surrounded by in our ecosystems. The practice I am focusing on at the moment is one in which I create large textile pieces that become a part of an ecosystem, inviting the inhabitants of the place to interact with and contribute to the piece. See Textile Events in my portfolio.
I founded and run the Micro Mill which periodically offers a range of craft workshops to the community here in Te Whanganui-a-Tara such as basket weaving with old mans beard (an invasive weed here), chain maile, paper making, lino printing on fabric, weaving etc.
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Fauna Rasmussen
USA
Fauna Rasmussen is a Minnesota based stop-motion animator. She currently attends the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, majoring in animation. Her work deals with ecology and
rewilding, often specifically covering the enormous loss of mega/macrofaunal biodiversity during the two latest mass extinctions. Her most recent project is made up of short stop-motion clips with
needle felted models taking place in the late Pleistocene to early Anthropocene. She can be seen driving around Minneapolis in her art-car, named Flora. -
hamsa fae
VIETNAM / FRANCE
hamsa fae is a Vietnamese-French artist working across performance, sound, movement, and sculpture, currently working in “Turtle Island (USA).
With a decade of research in shamanism and land-based inquiry, she uses the third gender body as a site for ancestral technologies and indigenous futurity. Her practice unravels the interconnectedness between identity, intimacy, and ecology by using systems of re-matriation to challenge coloniality. Through cyber and site-specific invitations, she edges audiences towards self and environmental remembrance.
“If my body is in constant connection to both nature and the digital, may some part of me always be performing. May it disregard time while existing in the wild or interwebs. Body leaves auric imprints on trees hugged, seaweed braided. Body leaves avatar footprints for computation, social consumption. I unfold in these sensual dualities, yet find freedom in the in-between.”
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Sophie Ferrier
UNITED KINGDOM
Facilitating meaningful engagement between ecological research and audiences through a material-centric craft approach, Sophie cultivates what she terms a land-based, ecologically restorative, and storytelling practice. Grounded in artistic inquiry, material exploration, and local contexts, her work emphasizes the significance of our personal connections to landscapes, while advocating for our role within intricate ecological systems. Drawing from her education in Design, Craft, Permaculture, and Circular systems, Sophie has developed an interdisciplinary practice centered on biodegradable, restorative, and regenerative materiality. From repurposing food waste into nurturing living soil, and from managing non-native invasive species into sculptural expression, her work spans a spectrum of creative and ecological endeavors.
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MoYah
MOZAMBIQUE
Born in Mozambique during a 16-year war, MoYah was forced to flee his country as a political refugee & move to Lisbon at a young age.Inspired by his parents broad musical taste & the impact of Rap music whilst living in Portugal, he quickly learned that music could be used not only for entertainment but also as a powerful tool for self exploration & social expression eventually leading him to writing raps that addressed issues relating to identity, social injustices & spirituality from the perspective of a child of the African Diaspora.
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Vedika Kushalappa
UNITED KINGDOM
Combining my background in lens based art, graphic design, research, and community design, I aim to cultivate cross-cultural dialogue by facilitating spaces that hold stories in today's current anthropocentric era. My personal artistic practice explores themes of eco-feminism, land, ecology, and migration. Crafting visual narratives that aim to share stories that are carried over generations that exist encoded in the systems of ecologies that are embedded within.
I have worked alongside communities, clients and individuals crafting activations by integrating embodied experiences and digital stories, in order to foster deeper connection and education among participants. Using design tools such as film, graphic design, workshopping, and curation, I am passionate about facilitating these spaces for collective learning to engage the communities I work with. -
Willow Gatewood
USA
Willow is an environmental scientist, interdisciplinary artist, musician, and storyteller from endless hills and secluded forests of rural Virginia. Grounded in research, their practice includes recycled and bio-based installation art, words, music, and biosonification (turning processes within living organisms into music and sound). Willow routinely merges visual, literary, and sonic mediums to create ethereal performances across the East Coast. They often weave themes of ecology, gender, and social issues with an autobiographical exploration of nature, and feel driven to use intersections of art, science, and technology to tackle environmental and social issues. Willow loves finding objects and introducing chaos and regeneration in ways that invite us to question what we are seeing, with hopes to spark conversation around critical issues of our time and of our future.

PRIORITIZE YOUR CREATIVITY WITH
A COMMUNITY OF CREATIVES COLLABORATING WITH
LAND, SEA & SKY
FOR ALL STAGES OF THE CREATIVE JOURNEY
with our membership programme you will connect in to an international + local community celebrating the Earth creatively.

INSPIRATION, INVIGORATION, CREATIVE SUPPORT & COMMUNITY
You can now join the Land Art community directly and take part in monthly gatherings to share and learn all things creative. Offering everything you need to evolve your creative practice and celebrate others whose work holds a light for the earth. We have created a membership programme for an even more connected community of creative offerings, support and inspiration.
The new Land Art Membership programme gives you the opportunity to enjoy a myriad of regenerative art experiences across the year from only £10 a month including a complimentary live workshop, on-demand talks, monthly online meetings, access to our creative network and discounts on all of our offerings. See ‘What’s included’ for more information.
We are the only regenerative arts collective of its kind. We are a CIC and our profits go directly to supporting artists, our community and regenerative thinking.