
Meg Webster (b. 1944, San Francisco, CA) has long been guided by an environmentalist impulse to celebrate and preserve the natural world. She produces both indoor sculptures made of salt, earth, sand, and other natural materials, and outdoor installations designed to enhance the community’s appreciation for and understanding of the earth’s ecosystem.
Webster currently has a one-person exhibition at Dia Beacon, NY and a long-term installation with Milwaukee Sclupture, WI. Webster received her MFA from Yale University in 1983, and had a one-person exhibition at Donald Judd’s exhibition space on Spring Street, New York, the same year. Subsequent one-person exhibitions have been held at The Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh (1984); the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh (1991); The Brooklyn Museum, New York (1992); P.S. 1 Contemporary Arts Center, New York (1998); MoMA P.S. 1 (2013); LMCC Art Center at Governor’s Island, New York (2021) and Judd Foundation, New York (2022). In 2016 she presented her large-scale earthwork, Concave Room for Bees, at Socrates Sculpture Park, commissioned for their exhibition “LANDMARK,” and in 2017 she participated in the two-person exhibition, Natura Naturans at Villa Panza in Varese, Italy. Webster lives and works in New York.