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  1. Introduction to 'environmental and land art': A special issue of ethics, place and environment.Emily Brady - 2007 - Ethics, Place and Environment 10 (3):257 – 261.
    Artists, art critics, and art theorists have discussed environmental art, land art, earth art, and ecological art at least since the 1960s. In the last decade, driven by growing environmental conce...
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  • Aesthetic regard for nature in environmental and land art.Emily Brady - 2007 - Ethics, Place and Environment 10 (3):287 – 300.
    Recent work in environmental ethics has seen a pragmatic turn that emphasises the importance of developing positive relationships with nature through practices involved in, for example, ecological restoration and community gardens. This article explores whether environmental and land art-making encourages positive aesthetic-moral relationships between nature and humans. It critically examines a particular type of aesthetic objection to these kinds of artworks and defends the work of Robert Smithson and Andy Goldsworthy, among others, against this charge. It is argued that rather (...)
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  • Ethically evaluating land art: Is it worth it?Sheila Lintott - 2007 - Ethics, Place and Environment 10 (3):263 – 277.
    Land art requires careful evaluation when assessing its aesthetic and ethical value. Critics of land art charge that it is unethical in that it uses nature without such use being justified by some future good. Other critics charge that land art harms nature aesthetically. In this essay, the author canvasses these charges and argues that some land art is ethically and aesthetically defensible, and that some has great and rare potential in both realms.
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  • Thinking through Botanic Gardens.Thomas Heyd - 2006 - Environmental Values 15 (2):197 - 212.
    This essay discusses ways of thinking about botanic gardens that pay close attention to their particularity as designed spaces, dependent on technique, that nonetheless purport to present (and preserve) natural entities (plants). I introduce an account of what gardens are, how botanic gardens differ from other gardens, and how this particular form of garden arose in history. After this I contrast three ways of understanding the function of botanic gardens in the present time: as sites of recreation, of conservation or (...)
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  • Reflections on reclamation through art.Thomas Heyd - 2007 - Ethics, Place and Environment 10 (3):339 – 345.
    Industrial interventions in the landscape leave their imprint in a permanent way, but there remain options on how to deal with land even at that point in time. In this essay, three alternatives are considered: leaving such sites as they are, restoring them to a condition resembling their original state, or transforming them into artworks. The author focuses in particular on the third option in order to determine to what degree it is possible for artistic reclamation to redeem such blights (...)
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  • Environmental aesthetics.Allen Carlson - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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