made an enduring contribution to history at age 21 when, as a student at Yale鈥檚 School of Architecture in 1981, she submitted a design proposal for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial鈥攁nd won. Since then, she鈥檚 produced an array of other memorials, architectural designs, and art. Upon viewing her work, it鈥檚 hard to miss signs of what inspires her: nature, and particularly landscapes. 鈥淚鈥檝e tried to get people鈥攅specially in my art鈥攖o look at the natural world in a way they might not be thinking about, whether it鈥檚 through sonar mapping of the ocean floor or looking at a river as an entire system," Lin told me in a recent interview. "I鈥檓 doing it partly as an artist in that I am extremely interested in exploring aspects of the natural world revealed by technology, but I鈥檓 also committed as an advocate.鈥 This past May, Lin received 探花精选鈥檚 Rachel Carson Award at its annual for her leadership. (Actor Sigourney Weaver was another recipient; see her interview .)
Fittingly, Lin鈥檚 fifth and last memorial is designed to stir audience鈥檚 environmental consciousness. Called What Is Missing?, the project 鈥渋s focused on raising awareness about species loss and connecting it to habitat loss,鈥 says Lin. But it will also convey what experts are doing to help, not to mention what we can tackle in our day-to-day life. 鈥淚t鈥檚 both a wake-up call and a call to action,鈥 says Lin.
A multi-sited memorial, pieces of What Is Missing will be installed in various locales鈥攖he first at the California Academy of Sciences鈥攁nd include one-to-two-minute films about various organisms. The installations will be linked to a nexus site鈥攊ndeed, a website called . The site entails an interactive map showing species' status around the world and will eventually reveal measures other people are taking toward a greener future. 鈥淟et鈥檚 re-imagine how the world could look,鈥 says Lin. She鈥檚 already well underway.