Contemporary women environmental artists (subsequently referred to as WEAs) are bringing into public view the messages of environmental concerns. Art in nature is meant to belong to all of us. By removing it from museums, galleries, and people‘s homes it becomes familiar, part of daily life. Public art communicates directly with an audience so that they may better understand how it applies to their own political, cultural, and social spheres. WEAs are creating public art that present female perspectives on what is happening to the earth (Lippard, 1983).