
This site includes galleries, publications, global collaborative projects and interventions, and studio-based art practice.
As the winner of the prestigious Hudgens Prize and Regents’ Professor at Georgia State University in Atlanta, Pam Longobardi has appeared in the pages of National Geographic, Sierra Magazine, as well as on the Weather Channel and other broadcast media. Her thought-provoking work has been featured in exhibitions, galleries, museums, and public spaces around the world.

We completed a new project in Tamarindo, Costa Rica! This project involved creation of a permanent artwork for the Boho Tamarindo, a boutique eco-resort with sustainable policies who dedicate resources to combatting plastic pollution. Our inspiration were the multitudinous and beautiful limpet shells that covered the rocky beaches in Tamarindo. This artwork is dedicated to the overlooked essential work of the invertebrates in cleaning our oceans and providing an essential link in the complex ecosystems of the ocean world.

A wonderful thing bubbled up from the deep blue sea this summer: an invitation for an ocean residency and artwork commission at Patina Maldives, an eco-resort with primary mission of functional sustainability and an art collection that includes a commissioned Skyscape architecture by renowned artist James Turrell. The Maldives is a place that has long been on my mind ever since I learned it was the lowest lying country on earth and would be ‘ground zero’ for sea level rise

I am so honored by this powerfully-written photo essay covering my work. Thank you @fabriquedesrecits for the article responding to my @earthsky interview, @sparknews for the repost, and @naturefinder Wayne Sentman for his great portrait of me after our scuba dive in Indonesia aboard the Sea Safari II. Translation in English follows French text below: https://fabriquedesrecits.com/inspire/pamela-longobardi-les-dechet-plastiques-dans-nos-oceans-de-linspiration-a-la-denonciation/ TRANSLATION in ENGLISH: Pamela Longobardi & plastic waste in our oceans, from inspiration to denunciation What if artists were interpreters, translators, ambassadors of the
My art uses plastic recovered from beaches around the world to understand how our consumer society is transforming the ocean Pam Longobardi, Georgia State University I am obsessed with plastic objects. I harvest them from the ocean for the stories they hold and to mitigate their ability to harm. Each object has the potential to be a message from the sea – a poem, a cipher, a metaphor, a warning. My work collecting and photographing ocean plastic and turning it into