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Le Good Society Launches Global Outdoor Art Exhibition Urging Action for a Planet at Breaking Point

Le Good Society’s Make Earth Day Every Day returns with global public art across Times Square, Piccadilly Circus and beyond, spotlighting climate change.

Hayden Clay in Amsterdam.

Led by Le Good Society, Make Earth Day Every Day has returned with an expanded international edition, transforming major digital screens across The Netherlands, Times Square and Piccadilly Circus into a rolling exhibition of environmentally focused artworks. Launched on 20th April, the project reaches hundreds of thousands of people daily, inserting urgent ecological narratives into the flow of everyday urban life.

Curated by founder Tia Grazette, the exhibition brings together an international group of artists, including David Shrigley, Bambi, Lora Zombie and Elijah McKenzie Jackson, alongside emerging voices. Working across themes of ocean loss, biodiversity decline and the restorative power of nature, the project frames climate change not as abstraction, but as something immediate, emotional and shared.

“Art has the ability to reach people in a way facts alone often cannot,”

says Tia Grazette.

“We’re living in a time where the science is clear, and the stakes are high. But alongside that, there is still beauty, connection, and hope. This exhibition is about reminding people what is at risk and that we still have the power to act and protect.”

The works operate across a spectrum of tone and approach. David Shrigley’s characteristically direct drawing — urging viewers to “Be kind to everyone and everything” — cuts through with disarming clarity, while artists such as Lora Zombie, Hayden Clay and Viola Hortova foreground the psychological and emotional need for connection to the natural world.

Elsewhere, Elijah McKenzie Jackson’s polished, symbolic painting reflects on rising sea levels and the loss of innocence for future generations, while Bambi turns her attention to the fragility of marine ecosystems, highlighting the unseen consequences of warming oceans.

“We’re holding on to what’s left – what happens next is up to us. Art has the power to shift how we see the world and on Earth Day and everyday, that shift can become action,”

says Bambi.

At its core, the project aligns with Earth Day’s theme Our Power, Our Planet, positioning creativity as a catalyst for awareness and, potentially, change. By occupying highly visible public spaces, Make Earth Day Every Day collapses the distance between viewer and issue — making the climate crisis not something observed from afar, but something encountered in real time, woven into the fabric of daily life.

The exhibition runs until May 3rd in New York Times Square and May 8th across the Netherlands and on Earth Day ( April 22nd) & 23rd /24th at Picadilly Circus thanks to LG.
MORE: @legoodsociety

About

Le Good Society continues to harness the power of art and technology as a force for good to amplify urgent environmental and social issues. Through a growing community of artists, writers, poets, musicians, scientists, and thinkers, the organisation strives to shift public consciousness and create a more ethical and sustainable world — one that puts people and the planet first. legoodsociety.com

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