For more than 35 years Robert Badger, an environmental activist, instructor, lecturer and photographer, has recorded the beauty of the earth and its accelerating destruction. His mastery of light and color, and his ability to emotionally portray the essence of a place in time have won him international awards for his Antarctica series, and "Best in Journalism" for his evocative environmental photography, work that is simultaneously beautiful and disturbing.
Using both aerial and ground perspectives, Rob's powerful color imagery focuses primarily on conservation, population and environmental issues. His illustrated lecture series, "Mining on Public Land" documents the destructive and toxic legacy of mining in America. In 1998 Rob was chosen by the Sierra Club to deliver this lecture at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. to support their efforts in promoting federal mining law reform.
Rob's work has been published in calendars, books, newspapers and national and international magazines, including The New York Times and Washington Post, and TIME, Newsweek, OMNI, Sierra and Wilderness Society magazines. As photographer for The Audubon Society, The Nature Conservancy, and The Trust for Public Land, Rob has completed more than fifty project assignments devoted to protecting and restoring our vanishing natural areas.
Order Information: robbadger@myexcel.com
